Oz woman saves apartment building from going up in flames – topless!

Melbourne, May 11 (ANI): A woman from Darwin has been hailed as a heroine after she put her own safety and modesty aside to save an apartment building from going up in flames – topless.

Fitness instructor Tash Bennett was sunbaking by the pool of the Alatai Apartments in Darwin city on May 6 when a nearby palm tree caught fire.

“I was just lying there when some ash fell on top of me. I wasn”t really paying attention because I was listening to my iPod,” the Courier Mail quoted her as saying.

Bennett, who raced to reception for help before rushing back to the pool to use the fire hose, only realised that she was topless after she battled the blaze for five minutes and then looked down at herself.

“I was pretty red faced on the day, having to hold myself while running to reception. I was sunbaking. I wasn”t exactly prepared,” she explained.

“But you”ve got to put out the fire before you deal with that,” she stated.

After the blaze, Bennett resumed her sunbaking while she waited for the fire crew to arrive.

Her husband, Daniel McNamee said he was proud of his wife”s quick action in the emergency.

“Apparently the flame was pretty high. It could have taken out the building,” he said.

“She was just lying there thinking, ”it”s getting pretty hot here”.

“It was only after the fire was out that she looked down and realised that she was topless. At one stage she had quite an audience, just having a laugh,” he revealed.

One witness, Johnny McCoy said Bennett had a full audience of residents while she battled the blaze.

“For the record, she was smoking hot herself, but provided all the boys a pretty awesome sight for an otherwise typical Thursday,” he said.

“Once she had the blaze under control, she then got her bikini situation under control and put everything back where it should be,” he added. (ANI)

Danny Glover slammed for not saluting flag at Utah State University”s graduation ceremony

New York, May 10 (ANI): Danny Glover earned the wrath of some members of the audience when he did not salute the flag at Utah State University”s graduation ceremony.

“Put your hand above your heart, Glover!” the New York Daily News quoted a spectator, as shouting during the presentation of the Stars and Stripes.

However, Glover was quick to point out that he meant no disrespect.

He said: “I was listening to the national anthem and paying attention.

“I probably wasn”t the only one in there who didn”t put a hand over their heart.”

He added: “People have problems sometimes with what I believe and who I talk to.

“I try to respect people, honor them.” (ANI)

Blinking eyes indicate a wandering mind

Washington, Apr 30 (ANI): You tend to blink more often when you”re daydreaming or when your mind is wandering off, concludes a new study.

Cognitive neuroscientist Daniel Smilek, of the University of Waterloo, studies how people pay attention — and don”t.

For the new study, he was inspired by brain research that shows, when the mind wanders, the parts of the brain that process external goings-on are less active.

“And we thought, ok, if that”s the case, maybe we”d see that the body would start to do things to prevent the brain from receiving external information,” Smilek says. “The simplest thing that might happen is you might close your eyes more.” So, Smilek and his colleagues, Jonathan S.A. Carriere and J. Allan Cheyne, also of the University of Waterloo, set out to look at how often people blink when their mind wanders.

Fifteen volunteers read a passage from a book on a computer. While they read, a sensor tracked their eye movements, including blinks and what word they were looking at. At random intervals, the computer beeped and the subjects reported whether they”d been paying attention to what they were reading or whether their minds were wandering — which included thinking about earlier parts of the text.

The participants blinked more when their minds were wandering than when they were on task, the team reports in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

“What we suggest is that when you start to mind-wander, you start to gate the information even at the sensory endings — you basically close your eyelid so there”s less information coming into the brain,” says Smilek. (ANI)

Our brains can’t handle too much love interest

When it comes to choosing romantic partners, the more potential mates a person meets, the more his or her decision is influenced, concludes a new study.

In particular, when people have a large number of potential dating partners to select among, they respond by paying attention to different types of characteristics – discarding attributes such as education, smoking status, and occupation in favour of physical characteristics such as height and weight.

A number of studies in recent years have looked at what happens to humans when faced with extensive choice – too many kinds of chocolate, or too many detergents to choose from at the grocery store.

Under such circumstances, consumer psychologists believe that the brain may become “overwhelmed,” potentially leading to poorer quality choice or choice deferral.

Psychological scientist Alison Lenton, of the University of Edinburgh, and economist Marco Francesconi, of the University of Essex, wanted to know if the same was true of mate choice.

“Is having too many mate options really like having too many jams?” they asked.

To find out how people respond to relatively limited versus extensive mate choice, the researchers analysed data from 84 speed dating events, which is where people meet with a series of potential dates for three minutes each. Afterward, the men and women report their choices (a “yes” or “no” for each person).

It should surprise no one that choosers generally preferred people who were taller, younger, and well educated.

Women also preferred partners who weren’t too skinny, and men preferred women who weren’t overweight. Beyond that, though, the attributes that speed daters paid attention to depended on how many opposite-sex speed daters attended the event.

At bigger speed dating events, with 24 or more dates, both male and female choosers were more likely to decide based on attributes that could be judged quickly, such as their dates” height, and whether they were underweight, normal weight, or overweight.

At smaller events, choosers were more likely to make decisions based on attributes that take longer to identify and evaluate, such as their dates” level of education, their type of job, and whether or not the person smokes.

“Obviously, I think we look for different attributes in partners than what we look for in a chocolate, a jam or a 401(k) plan. But one of the points we’re trying to make in this article is it’s the same brain we’re carrying around. There are constraints on what our brains can do – they’re quite powerful, but they can’t pay attention to everything at once,” said Lenton.

And if the brain is faced with abundant choice, even about who to go out with, it may make decisions based on what it can evaluate most quickly.

Thus, this previously invisible aspect of the choice environment has the potential to determine one’s romantic fate.

The study is published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Our brains can’t handle too much love interest

Washington, Apr 16 (ANI): When it comes to choosing romantic partners, the more potential mates a person meets, the more his or her decision is influenced, concludes a new study.

In particular, when people have a large number of potential dating partners to select among, they respond by paying attention to different types of characteristics – discarding attributes such as education, smoking status, and occupation in favour of physical characteristics such as height and weight.

A number of studies in recent years have looked at what happens to humans when faced with extensive choice – too many kinds of chocolate, or too many detergents to choose from at the grocery store.

Under such circumstances, consumer psychologists believe that the brain may become “overwhelmed,” potentially leading to poorer quality choice or choice deferral.

Psychological scientist Alison Lenton, of the University of Edinburgh, and economist Marco Francesconi, of the University of Essex, wanted to know if the same was true of mate choice.

“Is having too many mate options really like having too many jams?” they asked.

To find out how people respond to relatively limited versus extensive mate choice, the researchers analysed data from 84 speed dating events, which is where people meet with a series of potential dates for three minutes each. Afterward, the men and women report their choices (a “yes” or “no” for each person).

It should surprise no one that choosers generally preferred people who were taller, younger, and well educated.

Women also preferred partners who weren”t too skinny, and men preferred women who weren”t overweight. Beyond that, though, the attributes that speed daters paid attention to depended on how many opposite-sex speed daters attended the event.

At bigger speed dating events, with 24 or more dates, both male and female choosers were more likely to decide based on attributes that could be judged quickly, such as their dates” height, and whether they were underweight, normal weight, or overweight.

At smaller events, choosers were more likely to make decisions based on attributes that take longer to identify and evaluate, such as their dates” level of education, their type of job, and whether or not the person smokes.

“Obviously, I think we look for different attributes in partners than what we look for in a chocolate, a jam or a 401(k) plan. But one of the points we”re trying to make in this article is it”s the same brain we”re carrying around. There are constraints on what our brains can do – they”re quite powerful, but they can”t pay attention to everything at once,” said Lenton.

And if the brain is faced with abundant choice, even about who to go out with, it may make decisions based on what it can evaluate most quickly.

Thus, this previously invisible aspect of the choice environment has the potential to determine one”s romantic fate.

The study is published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science. (ANI)

Going Local to Fix a Broken Recycling System

I was out to dinner with a friend the other night who described the concept of cradle to cradle as a fairy tale. I had to admit, most days, it seems that way to me as well.

Even if you design the most perfectly recyclable product, you still have to put it into our waste system, which automatically drops its chance of being recovered to 30 percent. And frankly, designing the product might be the only easy part of this whole mess, because it is under the control of a single company.

Fundamentally, the waste recovery system in the U.S. makes dreaming about effective closed loop — or cradle to cradle, or end to end, or whatever you want to call it — a bold and likely disappointing endeavor. We need more reliable supply or significant demand pressure to create the needed change.

I guess I’m a glutton for disappointment, because still I see an opportunity to make huge gains in the way we manage material flows. And, like food, a solution just might be to “go local.”

We all witness, everyday, a failure in market forces to incentivize individuals, companies, and communities to optimize the value of materials at their end of life. Most “stuff” still ends up in a landfill. We have low rates of capture of contaminated materials in inefficient systems that produce streams too unreliable for most manufacturers to count on, and therefore the condition persists.

This isn’t news to anyone paying attention, but it persists because the dynamics are complicated and tangled. The end result is that we have a lot of waste that could be recycled: According to the EPA’s 2008 waste study, the largest single category of waste in Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) is 76 million tons of Containers and Packaging, of which plastics is the most prominent material type. And with only 13 percent of plastic being recycled, the other 87 percent ends up in landfill or waste to energy plants.

My first reaction to this was that given the low recycling rates, it would appear that there is a big opportunity to do something with this mess and make some money. But the solutions aren’t that simple, and we have a few vectors creating a perfect storm to capsizing major advancements in recycling in the U.S.

1. The materials we put into circulation are not practicably recyclable. They are such a mixture of materials that not even a Jetson-era recycling facility could separate the commodity components for recycling and reuse, AND there is no clear path to incentivize a different behavior from manufacturers (other than regulation).

2. The reverse supply chain is long and inefficient. This is not helpful when working with a relatively low value commodity, so that most opportunities to add value and margin get lost in too many miles and handoffs.

3. Right now, hauling industry economics make it more profitable to landfill material than to recycle it. Most traditional waste companies make less and even lose money when they recycle something vs. landfill it. And, as a result, recycling is only available to about half of U.S. households.

4. At $75 a barrel for oil, virgin plastic is the more attractive option. Because it comes without contamination and in reliable streams, new materials are a better alternative to a manufacturer than a lower quality, unreliable recycled stream.

5. The average consumer is too confused or apathetic to demand something different.

So, you have a supply and demand problem — not enough clean streams of recyclables and demand that isn’t all that demanding. The solution requires a concerted push on both sides, but given the nature of the global commodity markets, neither side is super eager to take on the risk of pushing too hard.

The risk — that they end up with a lot of material that no one wants, or a need for scarce material that drives costs out of control — is simply not appealing. Chicken or egg.
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Despite all that, I still have some reason for hope. There are some encouraging signs that the existing model is being challenged in ways that demonstrate a willingness to take risks and innovate toward a more recycled world.

For example, RecycleBank is incentivizing customers and municipalities to raise recycling rates and create greater volumes of clean recycling streams — in ways that begin to push economies where they need to be. Coke has built a new plant to vertically integrate. They accept their own and others’ bottles back to recycle into new bottles — in effect, improving their own supply of recycled material.

So how do we move from a few bright examples to create the incentive to change collection, sorting and processing practices at a broader scale? I believe a place to start is to “go local” — finding locations where manufacturers could use greater amounts of recycled plastic in their products and packaging.

Nine times out of 10, the reason they are not using more recycled content is due to quality and reliability issues, both of which can be fixed at a local level. The solution involves three components:

* Engaging the local community by creating more access to recycling, and incentivizing better recycling behavior;
* Working with the local recyclers and processors to better isolate and process the material needed by that local manufacturer; and then
* Having the manufacturer set up long-term supply processing contracts to give the recycler and processor the confidence required to invest

At a local scale, you can address supply and demand increases in a controlled manner that helps to limit risk. It also creates a great community story and starts to build a model for manufacturer engagement in end of life issues that isn’t a tax or fee, but rather a constructive redesign of the supply chain. The opportunity for big change in our material flows is now, and all we need are innovative companies to lead the way.

Who knows, maybe someday you will see a bumper sticker, “Waste: Go local.”

Sean Martin is a partner with Blu Skye, a strategy consulting firm focused on advising Fortune 500 companies on sustainability.

Photo CC-licensed by Flickr user Peter Kaminsky.

Timing is the key in visual memory

Washington, Mar 16 (ANI): Visual memory might not be dependent on a person’s attention level or what a scene contains, but it is the timing of when the scene is presented which is important, says a new study.

The study by researchers at the University of Washington shows how visual scenes are encoded into memory at behaviourally relevant points in time.

The ability to remember a briefly presented scene depends on a number of factors, such as its saliency, novelty, degree of threat, or behavioural relevance to a task.

It is believed that attention is the key, i.e., people can only remember part of a visual scene when paying attention to it at any given moment.

In the study, participants performed an attention-demanding “target detection task at fixation,” while also viewing a rapid sequence of full-field photographs of urban and natural scenes.

Participants were then tested on whether they recognized a specific scene from the sequence they had been shown or not.

“Usually, the addition of a secondary task decreases performance on the first task. However, in this particular case, adding a second task (letter identification) actually enhanced performance in the first task (scene memory) when targets were accurately detected in the second letter identification task,” said Jeffrey Lin, the lead author of the study.

The study adds to the understanding of how selective attention can influence the ability to remember specific features of our environment.

The results indicate a brain mechanism that automatically encodes certain visual features into memory at behaviorally relevant points in time, regardless of the spatial focus of attention.

Timing may not be everything, but it”s more important than we realize.

The study has been published in this week in the open access journal PLoS Biology. (ANI)

US nurturing long term ties with Pak to help counter militancy: Mullen

Washington, July 10 (ANI): The US Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman, Admiral Mike Mullen has said that the United States is in the process of nurturing a long-term relationship with Pakistan to help the troubled nation counter the threat emanating from extremist organizations like the Taliban and Al-Qaeda better.

Mullen said it is very important for the US to help the security forces of both Pakistan and Afghanistan to quell terrorism more effectively.

“I think we need long-term partnerships here with both these countries, which are just starting to be renewed under, obviously, very challenging circumstances,” The Daily Times quoted Mullen, as saying.

He said that the Pakistan Army has now recognized that the country faces threat from both the eastern border as well as the western border that the country shares with Afghanistan.

Admiral Mullen highlighted that Pakistan military must focus on both the two fronts, rather than paying attention to Kashmir only.

“This is a military that’s got focus on two different fronts, whether it’s the Kashmir area in the east, and they recognise there is a significant internal extremist threat to their country that they’re now attacking and dealing with, and it’s very much counterinsurgency-based,” he said.

Referring to the Swat military operation, Mullen said: “They’ve made an awful lot of progress.” (ANI)

Oz motorist fined after being caught ‘in the act’ with girlfriend

Melbourne, May 23 (ANI): An Aussie man has been slapped with a fine of 1400 dollars after police stopped his swerving car on the road, only to find him having sex with his girlfriend while driving.

Bradley Dean Milne, 33, and his girlfriend claimed that they couldn’t resist their temptation and started making out in the car before they reached their destination.

Milne was charged with not wearing his seatbelt, driving without due care, and drink-driving when a witness called the police after seeing his car swerving all over the road.

Judges at Darwin Magistrates Court heard that the couple were planning to drive to East Arm Wharf in the Mazda ute to have sex.

And Police prosecutor Leigh Cahill said tjat Milne “became aroused” and the woman gave him oral sex while he was driving, until they reached the traffic lights at the Berrimah Rd intersection.

Milne was swerving from one side of the road to the other until police stopped the car, and found a blood alcohol concentration of .097 per cent in his body.

“Come on, mate. What would you do? We were going to the wharf but we didn’t quite get there,” the Northern Territory News quoted Milne as saying at that time.

His lawyer Ian Rowbottam said that he was too embarrassed to speak about the incident again.

Rowbottam also said that Milne not been paying attention to his intoxication, and had been surprised at the reading.

“He wasn’t concentrating on that – he was concentrating on his amorous situation,” he said.

Magistrate Hugh Bradley said that he would not focus on things that were not unlawful, but warned that Milne needed to be more careful when driving.

“If these things are going to happen, you need to stop driving,” he said.

Milne was fined with 1400 dollars and was disqualified from driving for six months. (ANI)

Sara Jean Underwood felt ‘insecure’ about baring it all

Washington, May 14 (ANI): Former ‘Playmate of the Year’ Sara Jean Underwood has revealed that she felt very “insecure” with nudity before posing for the glossy pages of the men’s magazine.

Underwood, 25, who shot to fame after she was named Playmate of the Year in 2007, is so at ease with her nudity now that she had a coveted role in the raunchy new flick “Miss March”.

“It was scary for the first few times, it sounds so cliché but you just forget you’re nude. They’ve had the same few photographers for forty, fifty years and there are only a couple of people on set and nobody is looking at the fact that you’re nude,” Fox News quoted her as saying.

“They are looking at the lights, the hair, the make-up, the wardrobe and just you forget you have no clothes on because nobody’s even paying attention to that.

“So it was scary but as soon as the robe comes off you actually feel really comfortable. I was someone who was never comfortable with nudity, I was very insecure and really uncomfortable but I did it,” she said.

And prior to exposing all to millions and millions of men across the world, Underwood had only ever flashed the flesh for her loved one.

“I’ve only ever been nude in front of my boyfriend totally before Playboy, so that was a big step for me,” she said.

“I’m from a really small town in Oregon with about 5,000 people. I’ve always done the right thing my whole life when I was going to school and college at Oregon State. I was bored and I just wanted to do something crazy, I wanted to feel alive and I’ve had the time of my life. I’m so glad I decided to do it,” she added. (ANI)

Less than a quarter Brits believe common courtesy is important

London, Apr 22 (ANI): Less than a quarter of British people believe that common courtesy is important, a new survey has found.

The survey for bank First Direct revealed that simple acts of kindness are on decline in Britain.

Two-thirds refuse to given up their place in a queue while as many as one in 10 forget to say ‘please’ and ‘thank you’.

The study showed that thank-you letter has been replaced by electronic mail, as almost 40 pct said they preferred to use social networking sites Facebook and Twitter, to send their appreciation.

Dr Gary Wood, a social psychologist and author, said manners were an easy way to get along with others during the recession.

“There is great power to be found in the fine detail. Good manners and social courtesy cost nothing and can have a profound effect on other people,” the Telegraph quoted Wood as saying.

“We can literally make someone’s day, and help to reduce their stress by paying attention to these little things, which then has a knock-on effect in our own lives.

“A smile or a kind word can actually set us up for the day, making it more likely that we focus on the good things rather than the doom and gloom,” he added.

Flowers, and the remembering of a birthday or anniversary, were further down the list. (ANI)

1 in 10 youth gamers ‘addicted to video games’

Washington, April 21 (ANI): Nearly one in 10 kids and teens who play video games show behavioral signs that may indicate addiction, a new study has found.

The findings are based on a Harris Poll survey of 1,178 American youths (ages 8-18).

Researchers at Iowa State University (ISU) and the National Institute on Media and the Family found that some gamers show at least six symptoms of gambling addiction such as lying to family and friends about how much they play games, using the games to escape their problems and becoming restless or irritable when they stop playing.

They may also skip homework to play videogames or spend too much time playing the games and do poorly in school.

“Although the general public uses the word ‘addiction,’ clinicians often report it as pathological use. This is the first study to tell us the national prevalence of pathological play among youth gamers, and it is almost 1 in 10,” said Gentile, who is also director of research for the Minneapolis-based National Institute on Media and the Family.

“What we mean by pathological use is that something someone is doing — in this case, playing video games — is damaging to their functioning. It’s not simply doing it a lot. It has to harm functioning in multiple ways,” Gentile said.

Gentile analyzed data collected in a January 2007 Harris Poll survey. He compared respondents’ video game play habits to the symptoms established in The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders for pathological gambling. Gamers were classified as “pathological” if they exhibited at least six of 11 symptoms.

The pathological gamers in the study played video games 24 hours per week, about twice as much as non-pathological gamers.

They also were more likely to have video game systems in their bedrooms, reported having more trouble paying attention in school, received poorer grades in school, had more health problems, were more likely to feel “addicted,” and even stole to support their habit.

The study also found that pathological gamers were twice as likely to have been diagnosed with attention problems such as Attention Deficit Disorder or Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. (ANI)

Designer purses designed to look like flowers sell for 1,000 pounds

London, Apr 20 (ANI): Designer purses designed in the shape of flowers, stones and even a cactus are selling for as much as 1,000 pounds in the market.

The designer, Kathleen Dustin, creates the accessories from clay, and she has revealed that the purses have been designed for women who are confident about their style.

“Most people are amazed at them. They are for the woman who is very confident in her own personal style because they make a very strong statement,” the Telegraph quoted her as saying.

Dustin, 58, from New Hampshire in America, said she had drawn her inspiration from observations made throughout her life.

“The imagery of my work comes from taking a deep look at my life, responding to it, and expressing it so that it strikes a chord in someone else too, encouraging them to pay attention,” she said.

“I’ve been paying attention to elements in the woods such as seed pods, buds, moss, grasses, leaves, sticks and stones.

“My hope is that it causes someone to pay attention to a tiny seed pod or to the feeling of grass under ones feet, to pay attention to the small mundane things in one’s life.

“These purses are functional, you are supposed to touch them, caress them and examine them,” she stated.

She also revealed that she only makes 200 of the limited edition purses a year, each painstakingly handmade by using coloured Polymer clay and then sculpturing the extraordinary designs before baking them in an oven.

“When finished they are flexible and lightweight so they can be banged around and are quite functional. My idea is for someone to use a purse from time to time for special events and then display it when not in use,” she added.

The designs, which are all unique, range from 200 pounds to 1,000 pounds, and can be ordered through her website www.kathleendustin.com (ANI)

Butterflies use wings to send both ‘sexy’ and ‘repulsive’ signals

Washington, April 2 (ANI): The eyespots of some butterflies serve to both attract mates and ward off predators, according to new research by Yale University biologists.

The researchers say that butterflies seem able to both attract mates and ward off predators by using different sides of their wings.

“You want to be noticeable and desirable for mates, but other onlookers, including predators, are paying attention to those signals as well,” says Jeffrey Oliver, a postdoctoral associate in Yale’s Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology.

Oliver joined forces with Yale biologist Antonia Monteiro to study whether the eyespots on the upperside of butterflies’ wings – specifically, those of bush brown butterflies – serve a different purpose than the ones on the underside.

The researchers used different evolutionary models for their study.

They found that the eyespots on the upperside of the butterflies’ wings appeared to evolve much more quickly than those on the underside, meaning they appear and disappear frequently through the course of evolution.

According to them, the finding is consistent with the theory that these are used to attract mates, as signals used for sexual selection tend to evolve faster than others.

Oliver claims that his group’s study is the first to employ evolutionary history models to show that a species can use the same signal on different areas of its body to communicate different messages.

He says that butterflies can flash hidden eyespot on their forewings to confuse predators and give themselves time to escape.

While the researchers have yet to find out how the upperside eyespots communicate with potential mates, it is thought that they might help butterflies identify each other and thus would help keep different species from cross-mating.

Oliver has revealed that his team next plans to use longer evolutionary timescales to study where and how eyespots evolved, as well as whether they developed all at once, or independently over time.

The study appears in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. (ANI)

How Ronan Keating keeps the passion alive with wife

London, Mar 23 (ANI): Irish pop singer Ronan Keating has revealed how he keeps the passion alive with his wife Yvonne Connolly, whom he married on April 30, 1998.

For Keating, 32, who had admitted he was a virgin when Boyzone started, staying sexy is a part of the package, which makes the passion go on.

“We spend time together and we listen to each other. I buy her things she likes. It’s about being romantic and paying attention to each other,” the News of the World quoted him as saying.

“Trying to stay sexy is important in our relationship, too. We still fancy each other like crazy!” he added. (ANI)

Special vitamin supplement could prevent baby brain disorder

London, Mar 22 (ANI): Taking a special vitamin supplement during pregnancy can keep hydrocephalus, one of the most common birth brain defects, at bay, claim researchers.

According to scientists, who conducted tests on rats to reach the conclusion, results have shown a combination of folates dramatically reduces the rates of hydrocephalus – in which fluids build up in the brain’s chambers.

However, it’s too early to say anything further, say researchers in the Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology.

Most obvious symptom of the disorder is an unusually large head size. Other symptoms can include: vomiting, sleepiness, irritability, downward deviation of the eyes and seizures.

Many children also display symptoms that can be mistaken for naughtiness, such as verbal aggression and swearing, hyperactivity, not paying attention and generally unusual behaviour.

Although the supplement itself is not currently available, so researchers are seeking the support of a pharmaceutical company willing to produce it as a pill.

“Cerebrospinal fluid is not a liquid which simply cushions the brain and carries chemicals around it. It is actively produced and transported and plays an essential biological role in developing the brain,” The BBC quoted lead researcher Jaleel Miyan, as saying. (ANI)