Emma Watson says she’s the worst in her acting class

London, May 7 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson thinks she is the worst student in her acting class.

Watson, who has been playing the role of Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter films, put her career on hold to enrol at Brown University in America, where she also studies European women”s history and Ovid”s Metamorphoses.

And despite performing in Hollywood over the past decade, Watson remains modest about her abilities.

“I think I”m actually the worst person in the class,” the Telegraph quoted her as telling Vanity Fair magazine. (ANI)

Neural mechanism that helps adapt to new situations discovered

Washington, April 29 (ANI): A new research has offered intriguing insight into the way humans approach novel situations.

The new study by David Badre, assistant professor of cognitive and linguistic sciences at Brown University, and colleagues at the University of California-Berkeley suggests that the brain””s frontal cortex may have a larger role in decision-making in unfamiliar situations than previously believed.

Scientists have long known that the brain””s frontal cortex supports concrete rule learning. Less clear is how the brain processes more complex and unfamiliar knowledge.

In the study new study, the research team tested whether the frontal lobe has the ability to process more abstract knowledge and how this ability could help navigate new situations and stimuli.

The researchers believed that the brain””s frontal cortex could be organized in a front-to-back hierarchy in which the neurons at the front of the frontal cortex have the ability to process more progressively abstract knowledge.

This part of the brain, therefore, would be more important in planning and deciding what to do when a person is faced with an unfamiliar problem.

To test this hypothesis, the researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to study participants during two unfamiliar tasks, one with concrete rules and the other with more abstract rules.

“The average person can easily determine how to open a door by pulling a rope rather than turning a knob, even if they have not seen the rope handle previously,” said David Badre, assistant professor of cognitive and linguistic sciences at Brown.

“We wanted to investigate how the brain achieves this remarkable flexibility and test whether we use generalized forms of past knowledge to solve current problems,” he added.

The researchers found that the activity in an anterior part of the frontal cortex predicted individual differences in participants”” success at discovering abstract relationships.

Based on their observations, the researchers suggest that when faced with a new situation, people may search for relationships between context and action that involve multiple levels of abstraction simultaneously.

This capability could underlie the ability to adapt behaviours based on the generalization of separate, past learning.

“How we face new problems and the reasoning, decision-making and action that we take in an uncertain situation may have more to do with the functional organization of the frontal cortex than we previously realized,” said Badre.

The study appears in the current edition of Neuron. (ANI)

Childhood abuse ‘accelerates body’s ageing process’

Washington, March 17 (ANI): Physical or emotional abuse during childhood accelerates the body”s ageing process, according to a new research.

Cellular aging remains somewhat of a mystery, although there is growing evidence that over time, the DNA within cells begins to show signs of aging.

One of these signs is the shortening of telomeres, which are DNA “caps” at the end of chromosomes that promote cellular stability.

Telomere length is a measure of biological aging because telomeres shorten progressively with each cell division.

Shorter telomere lengths have been linked to a variety of aging-related medical conditions including cardiovascular disease and cancer.

Stress and trauma such as childhood abuse and neglect are risk factors for several medical and psychiatric illnesses, and stress is known to promote cellular aging.

So, Audrey Tyrka and her colleagues from Butler Hospital and Brown University examined the DNA of healthy adults who had a history of childhood maltreatment and found they had shorter telomeres than those who did not experience child maltreatment.

Tyrka said that the findings “suggest the possibility that early developmental experiences may have profound effects on biology that can influence cellular mechanisms at a very basic level and even lead to accelerated aging.”

The study has been published in Biological Psychiatry. (ANI)

Emma Watson splits from longterm beau

London, March 15 (ANI): Emma Watson has reportedly resumed her single status after splitting from her longterm boyfriend.

The Harry Potter actress, who began dating financier Jay Barrymore in 2008, was said to have put an end to the romance just months after moving to the US to pursue a university degree.

“Emma and Jay were in trouble for months and with Emma at Brown University in America, the transatlantic gap proved too much for their relationship to survive,” the Daily Star quoted a source as telling the Mail.

The 19-year-old star was named Hollywood’s highest paid female star of 2009 in a list compiled by Vanity Fair magazine. (ANI)

Emma Watson used gap year to design teen summer wear for People Tree

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson has revealed that she spent her gap year designing a ‘complete teenage summer wardrobe’ for the fair trade fashion brand People Tree.

Watson, 19, who has just enrolled at Brown University in the US, acted as a creative advisor for the ethical fashion collection, which will reach shops in February.

“I wanted to help People Tree produce a younger range because I was excited by the idea of using fashion as a tool to help alleviate poverty and knew it was something I could help make a difference with,” Sky News quoted her as saying.

“I think young people like me are becoming increasingly aware of the humanitarian and environmental issues surrounding fast fashion and want to make good choices but there aren’t many options out there.

“It has been the most incredible gap year project,” she added.

Among items that the teen actress has had a hand in designing were knitwear, cotton t-shirts, jersey dresses, and poplin shorts.

Her range also includes some more bizarre items, including “bohemian hand embroidered bed throws, recycled sweetie wrapper jewellery, banana fibre slouchy beanies and head scarves.”

They will be sold by People Tree, a company which aims at supporting developing countries and promoting environmental projects. (ANI)

Watson ‘makes smooth transition from actress to student’

London, September 7 (ANI): ‘Harry Potter’ star Emma Watson seems to have made a smooth transition from her glamorous life as an actress to a simple life of a student.

The 19-year-old beauty was spotted wearing a simple white T-shirt, denim shorts, and trainers in her campus at Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island.

She apparently looked happy and relaxed under the sun as she chilled with her friends.

Watson also passed all her A-levels with straight A grades.

She even believes that going to university will make her a better actress.

“I actually think going to university will make me a better actress,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

She added: “It sounds so geeky, but I really do like studying and reading, and if I’m not working on Harry Potter, then my greatest relaxation is to sit with a book.”

Watson is taking a degree in literature. (ANI)

Watson charms classmates with magic trick on first day of college

London, September 7 (ANI): ‘Harry Potter’ star Emma Watson had magic tricks up her sleeves to charm her classmates on the first day of her college.

She showed how from a sitting position to magically raise yourself to standing without putting your hands on the ground, reports the Sun.

The 19-year-old beauty’s friends apparently had a hearty laugh on seeing the trick.

Watson is pursuing a degree in Literature at Brown University, in Providence, Rhode Island. (ANI)

New evidence points towards recent ice age on Mars

Washington, August 28 (ANI): In a new research, scientists have found evidence on the Martian terrain that points towards a recent ice age on the Red Planet.

The research, by Samuel C. Schon and James W. Head from the Department of Geological Sciences, Brown University, was carried out to explain the distribution of ice in the near subsurface at middle to high latitudes on Mars.

Two hypotheses emerged out of the research.

While one theory suggested diffusion of water vapor into porous regolith, the other indicated atmospheric deposition of ice, snow, and dust during recent ice ages.

To determine which of these hypotheses is correct, Schon and his team used data from the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) to examine the structure of exposed subsurface mid-latitude Martian terrain.

The researchers observed that the terrain is characterized by layered deposits multiple meters thick that stretch over many hundreds of meters.

They suggest that climate variations are most likely the source of this stratification.

The layers probably formed as dust, ice, and snow were deposited on the ground during recent ice ages, which occurred during periods when the tilt of Mars’s axis of rotation was higher than usual.

Vapor diffusion would be unlikely to result in the observed layered structure, according to the researchers.

They said that the observations also suggest that significant subsurface ice may remain in the 30 – 50 degrees mid-latitude regions. (ANI)

Metal catalysts in carbon nanotubes block critical signalling pathway in neurons

Washington, August 28 (ANI): In what may prove very useful in improving treatments for human neurological disorders, Brown University scientists have found out why carbon nanotubes tend to block a critical signalling pathway in neurons.

Writing about their findings in the journal Biomaterials, the researchers have revealed that it is not the tubes, but the metal catalysts used to form them, that are to blame.

They say that minute amounts of a metal called ‘yttrium’ may impede neuronal activity.

They add that the findings mean that carbon nanotubes without metal catalysts may be able to treat human neurological disorders, although other possible biological effects still need to be studied.

“It’s a problem we can fix. We can purify the nanotubes by removing the metals, so it’s a problem we can fix,” said Lorin Jakubek, a Ph.D. candidate in biomedical engineering and lead author of the paper.

Taking single-walled carbon nanotubes to the laboratory of Brown neuroscientist Diane Lipscombe, the research team zeroed in on ion channels located at the end of neurons’ axons.

These channels are gateways of sorts, driven by changes in the voltage across neurons’ membranes. When an electrical signal, known as an action potential, is triggered in neurons, these ion channels “open”, each designed to take in a certain ion.

One such ion channel passes only calcium, a protein that is critical for transmitter release and thus for neurons to communicate with each other.

In experiments using cloned calcium ion channels in embryonic kidney cells, the researchers found that nickel and yttrium, two metal catalysts used to form the single-walled carbon nanotubes, were interfering with the ion channel’s ability to absorb the calcium.

Lipscombe, who specializes in neuronal ion channels and is a corresponding author on the paper, pointed out that yttrium’s ionic radius is nearly identical to calcium’s, which is why it “gets stuck and prevents calcium from entering and passing through. It’s an ion pore blocker.”

The experiments showed that yttrium in trace amounts – less than 1 microgram per milliliter of water – may disrupt normal calcium signalling in neurons and other electrically active cells, an amount far lower than what had been thought to be safe levels.

With nickel, the amount needed to impede calcium signalling was 300 times higher.

“Yttrium is so potent that … a very low nanotube dose” would be needed to affect neuronal activity, said Robert Hurt, professor of engineering and a corresponding author on the paper.

Jakubek said she was surprised that the metals turned out to be the cause.

“Based on the literature, I thought it would be the nanotubes themselves,” she said. (ANI)

High levels of reward chemical dopamine favour adventurous choices

London, July 28 (ANI): If you are among those who love to try a new dish in a restaurant rather than going for the tried and tested one, then the level of the reward chemical dopamine you have in a brain region are probably high, according to a study.

A gene, called COMT, codes for an enzyme that breaks down dopamine in the prefrontal cortex.

People with a less efficient version of COMT have more dopamine in this region, and this makes them good at storing multiple ideas in the short term.

In order to determine whether COMT affects decision-making too, Michael Frank and colleagues at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, asked volunteers to stop a stop-clock hundreds of times in exchange for points.

They observed that sometimes stopping it early garnered most points, while at other times a late response did best.

That forced volunteers to keep changing their strategies, reports New Scientist magazine.

Those with the inefficient version of COMT were more likely than people with the active version to switch strategies to try to do even better

The team concluded that high levels of dopamine in the prefrontal cortex make people more adventurous, even when the status quo is fine.

The study has been published in Nature Neuroscience. (ANI)

Emma Watson moving to U.S. for further studies

Washington, July 10 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson has confirmed that she will be moving to U.S. this autumn to continue her education in an American university.

“I’m coming to the States actually. I’m doing a liberal arts degree and I’ll hopefully focus in the humanities… This is one of the reasons I’ve come to the States, because I’m young and indecisive. But maybe (I’ll concentrate) in English or maybe art. I don’t know, we’ll see,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

However, the actress has not disclosed the name of the university she will be attending her classes in.

Rumours are abuzz that she’s enrolled at New York’s Columbia University and Brown University in Rhode Island, among others. (ANI)

Decision-making brain region also deciphers different phonetic sounds

Washington, July 1 (ANI): A collaborative team of researchers from Brown University and the University of Cincinnati have found that a front portion of the brain, which handles decision-making, also helps decipher different phonetic sounds.

Writing about their findings in the journal Psychological Science, the researchers have revealed that this section of the brain is called the left inferior frontal sulcus.

They say that this section treats different pronunciations of the same speech sound-such as a ‘d’ sound-the same way.

The researchers say that in determining this, they have solved a mystery.

MRI studies showed that test subjects reacted to different sounds – ta and da, for example – but appeared to recognize the same sound even when pronounced with slight variations. These five sounds are the same, but the fifth (right) has a slightly different pronunciation.

“No two pronunciations of the same speech sound are exactly alike. Listeners have to figure out whether these two different pronunciations are the same speech sound such as a ‘d’ or two different sounds such as a ‘d’ sound and a ‘t’ sound,” said Emily Myers, assistant professor (research) of cognitive and linguistic sciences at Brown University.

Lead researcher Sheila Blumstein, the Albert D. Mead Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences at Brown, said that the findings provided a window into how the brain processes speech.

“No one has shown before what areas of the brain are involved in these decisions. As human beings we spend much of our lives categorizing the world, and it appears as though we use the same brain areas for language that we use for categorizing non-language things like objects,” said Blumstein.

The research team studied 13 women and five men, ages 19 to 29. All were brought into an MRI scanner at Brown University’s Magnetic Resonance Facility, so that the researchers could measure blood flow in response to different types of stimuli.

Subjects were asked to listen to repetitive syllables in a row as they lay in the scanner. The sounds were derived from recorded, synthesized speech. Initially subjects would hear identical “dah” or “tah” sounds – four in a row – which would reduce brain activity because of the repetition. The fifth sound could be the same or a different sound.

The study showed that the brain signal in the left inferior frontal sulcus changed when the final sound was a different one. But if the final sound was only a different pronunciation of the same sound, the brain’s response remained steady.

According to Myers and Blumstein, the study matters in the bid to understand language and speaking and how the brain is able to understand certain sounds and pronunciations.

“What these results suggest is that [the left inferior frontal sulcus] is a shared resource used for both language and non-language categorization,” Blumbstein said. (ANI)

Weight loss competitions really do work

Washington, May 2 (ANI): A new study has shown that weight loss competitions prove effective in fight against obesity.

The research team led by Rena Wing from Brown University evaluated the Shape Up Rhode Island 2007 weight loss competition developed by Indian origin scientist Rajiv Kumar a medical student at Alpert Medical School could successfully lose weight at minimal cost.

“We evaluated the results and showed that this is an effective way to reach large numbers of people,” said Wing.

Shape Up Rhode Island reduced the percentage of patients in the study who were obese from 39 percent to 31 percent.

The researchers found that individuals who increased their activity the most achieved the best weight losses.

The study looked at 4,717 people who participated in Shape Up Rhode Island’s 2007 effort, which Kumar designed to feature team competition in an effort to encourage more exercise and weight loss.

They found that team-based weight loss competition could promote modest weight loss in large numbers of people.

The authors also suggest possible improvements, such as the inclusion of diet and exercise education, teaching ways to change behaviour or offering access to health coaches.

The study appears in journal Obesity. (ANI)

Jack Nicholson gives acting tips to students at daughter’s university

London, April 28 (ANI): Jack Nicholson handed out acting advice to students at his daughter’s university campus on April 25.

The Departed star joined the panel including producers Robert Evans, Brad Grey and former studio chief Peter Bart for the Ivy League Film Festival session at Rhode Island’s Brown University.

According to the New York Post, learners picked up pointers on the subject of loyalty and artistic integrity, reports the Daily Star.

The 72-year-old had later reportedly spent time with Lorraine, his 19-year-old daughter from a former girlfriend. (ANI)

Cognitive therapy can ease nonepileptic seizures

Washington, April 16 (ANI): Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) can benefit patients with psychogenic nonepileptic seizures (PNES), according to a new study.

PNES is a condition that is marked by seizures resembling epileptic seizures. However, unlike epilepsy, seizures in patients with PNES are not caused by the same brain cell firing that occurs with epilepsy.

Patients who suffer from PNES often exhibit a higher incidence of symptoms such as anxiety and depression than patients with epilepsy, along with a reduced quality of life due to the effect of the seizures themselves.

However, it is recognized that conditions such as anxiety and depression often respond well to CBT.

Keeping that in mind, senior author W. Curt LaFrance, Jr., MD, MPH, director of the division of neuropsychiatry and behavioral neurology at Rhode Island Hospital, developed a CBT for PNES treatment manual.

Modified from a CBT for patients with epilepsy workbook, the treatment manual has been developed over the past five years to address core issues in patients with PNES.

LaFrance, who is also an assistant professor of psychiatry and neurology (research) at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University, worked with colleagues at Rhode Island Hospital’s comprehensive epilepsy center to conduct an open, prospective clinical trial assessing the outcomes of outpatients with video-electroencephalogram (EEG)-confirmed PNES who were treated using the CBT for PNES manual.

The researchers outlined a clinical model for management of PNES, where a key component is to identify precursors, precipitants and perpetuating factors of the seizures.

“Based on the tendency of patients with PNES to somatize (to manifest mental pain as pain in one’s body), we hypothesized that identifying and modifying cognitive distortions and environmental triggers for PNES would reduce PNES,” LaFrance said.

The researchers then identified patients who were referred to the Rhode Island Hospital neuropsychiatry/behavioral neurology clinic after being diagnosed with PNES and at least one typical PNES was captured on video EEG.

Of the 101 patients who were assessed for eligibility, 21 patients met the criteria or agreed to participate. Of those 21, 17 completed the 12-week session of CBT intervention and were included in the analysis.

LaFrance noted that the results of the clinical trial showed the CBT to be effective in terms of reducing the frequency of PNES.

The evaluation of quality of life scores, as well as assessments of depression, anxiety, somatic symptoms and psychosocial functioning also showed statistically significant improvement from baseline to final session.

The study was published in the April 2009 edition of Epilepsy and Behavior. (ANI)

Emma Watson to study in U.S.?

Washington, April 13 (ANI): Harry Potter star Emma Watson may soon move to the U.S. to pursue further studies, according to reports.

Earlier this year (09), the British actress announced that she was putting her acting career on hold to concentrate on her degree.

According to British newspaper the News of the World, Watson applied to a number of colleges in the U.K. and America – but has now settled on the prestigious Brown University in Rhode Island.

“She looked at universities over here (England) but fell in love with Brown. She has a lot of friends there,” Contactmusic quoted a source as telling the publication. (ANI)

Nicotine may affect bodily processes more broadly than earlier thought

Washington, April 4 (ANI): Brown University scientists have found that nicotine is not only addictive, but it also has the ability to interfere with several cellular interactions in the body.

The researchers say that their findings may be helpful in developing better treatments for various diseases, considering that pharmaceutical companies rely on basic research to identify new cellular interactions that can serve as targets for potential new drugs.

Professor Edward Hawrot and his graduate students William Brucker and Joao Paulo set out to provide a more basic understanding of how nicotine affects the process of cell communication through the mammalian nervous system.

They looked specifically at the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor in mouse brain tissue, which is very similar to a receptor that exists in humans.

The researchers said that 55 proteins were found to interact with the alpha-7 nicotinic receptor, and that those connections were previously unknown.

“This is called a “nicotinic” receptor and we think of it as interacting with nicotine, but it likely has multiple functions in the brain,” Hawrot said.

“And in various, specific regions of the brain this same alpha-7 receptor may interact with different proteins inside neurons to do different things,” he added.

He revealed that one in particular – the G alpha protein – was among the most unexpected proteins to be identified in the study, as it is usually associated with a completely different class of receptors.

The researcher says that the importance of this finding can be understood from the fact that G alpha proteins are involved in many different biochemical and signalling processes throughout the brain and the rest of the body.

According to him, 40 percent of all G alpha proteins all currently used therapeutic drugs target a member of the large GPCR family of receptors.

Based on their observations, the researchers came to the conclusion that the alpha-7 receptors have a much broader role in the body than previously suspected, and that the newly identified associated proteins could also be affected when nicotine binds to the alpha-7 receptor.

Hawrot believes that his team’s work may lead to the development of new treatments to combat smoking addiction.

He even says that the new findings may have future implications for diseases like schizophrenia, as recent studies have suggested that some cases of this condition are linked with deletions where a block of genes, including the gene for the alpha-7 receptor, is missing.

For their research, Hawrot and his colleagues studied mice genetically engineered to lack the alpha-7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, and compared them with normal mice.

The findings of the study have been published in the Journal of Proteome Research. (ANI)

Methane-producing mineral discovered on Mars

London, March 28 (ANI): Scientists have reported the discovery of a methane-producing mineral on Mars.

According to a report in Nature News, the evidence for the existence of the mineral, known as serpentine, was found by Bethany Ehlmann, a PhD student at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island.

Ehlmann used a spectrometer on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter to identify two small outcrops of the mineral.

Serpentine arises from another mineral, olivine, in a hydrothermal process in which hydrogen gas is produced – a potential energy source for microbes that could in turn produce methane.

The process of serpentinization also produces methane itself, without the need for life. “It was a past source of methane, for sure,” said Ehlmann.

Serpentine can also be altered, in lower temperature water, into carbonate.

However, the finding does not rule out life on Mars today. That depends on whether the presence of serpentine has anything to do with the apparent production of present-day methane.

“It’s certainly an intriguing coincidence that one of the major regions in which we find these minerals has been highlighted as a possible source region of methane. But, there’s this timing problem,” said Ehlmann.

The problem of timing arises because serpentine on Mars is ancient, about 3.8 billion years old, whereas the reports of methane gas are contemporary.

Yet it is possible, according to Ehlmann, that fractures deep underground could be providing the necessary water and heat for serpentine to be formed today, and for methane to percolate up. (ANI)

Chris Brown not applying for university education

Washington, Mar 25 (ANI): Rapper Chris Brown has denied reports that he’s applying for university education.

The rumours started off after the 19-year-old singer was spotted visiting Norfolk State University in his native Virginia at the weekend with mother and cousin.

However, the Kiss Kiss hitmaker has denied the reports, insisting a relative is a prospective student at the University.

A representative for Brown tells TMZ.com the singer visited the college as a “support factor” for his cousin, and has “not applied”, “not enrolled” and is “not interested” in returning to his studies at this point, reports Contactmusic.

Meanwhile, the embattled star is due to be arraigned in a Los Angeles court in April after his alleged bust up with girlfriend Rihanna. (ANI)

Now, robots that respond to human gestures

Washington, Mar 12 (ANI): Autonomous, do-it-all robots are no longer the domain of science fiction or cartoons like ‘The Jetsons’, thanks to scientists from Brown University who have developed a robot that responds to human gestures.

The research team has demonstrated how a robot can follow nonverbal commands from a person in a variety of environments – indoors as well as outside – all without adjusting for lighting.

“We have created a novel system where the robot will follow you at a precise distance, where you don’t need to wear special clothing, you don’t need to be in a special environment, and you don’t need to look backward to track it,” said Chad Jenkins, assistant professor of computer science at Brown University and the team’s leader.

During the study, the researchers including Brown graduate students, showed how the robot responded as they used variety of hand-arm signals to instruct the robot, including “follow,” “halt,” “wait” and “door breach.”

The Brown team started with a PackBot, a mechanized platform developed by iRobot that has been used widely by the U.S. military for bomb disposal, among other tasks.

They outfitted their robot with a commercial depth-imaging camera. They also geared the robot with a laptop that included novel computer programs that enabled the machine to recognize human gestures, decipher them and respond to them.

The researchers made two key advances with their robot. The first involved what scientists call visual recognition. They created a computer program, whereby the robot recognized a human by extracting a silhouette, as if a person were a virtual cutout.

This allowed the robot to home in on the human and receive commands without being distracted by other objects in the space.

The second advance involved the depth-imaging camera, where they used a CSEM Swiss Ranger, which uses infrared light to detect objects and to establish distances between the camera and the target object, and measure the distance between the camera and any other objects in the area.

The result is a robot that doesn’t require remote control or constant vigilance, Jenkins said.

“What you really want is a robot that can act like a partner,” Jenkins added. “You don’t want to puppeteer the robot. You just want to supervise it, where you say, ‘Here’s your job. Now, go do it.’”

The study was presented at Human-Robot Interaction conference, in San Diego. (ANI)