Zero tolerance policy ineffective in schools: Study

Washington, May 11 (ANI): Zero tolerance policy is ineffective in schools, according to a new American study.

According to two Michigan State University researchers, strategies adopted by schools that mandate automatic punishment for weapons, drugs, profanity and various forms of disruptive behaviour are failing to make students feel safe.

The policy, established in the mid-1990s to address gun violence in schools, has become plagued by inconsistent enforcement and inadequate security, the study points out.

Laura McNeal, assistant professor of teacher education and lead researcher, said: “Zero tolerance policy represents what happens when there is a disconnect between law on the books and law in action,” said McNeal, who has a law degree. “We need to reform existing policies such as zero tolerance to ensure every child receives a high-quality education in a safe and supportive learning environment.”

For the study, McNeal and Christopher Dunbar Jr., associate professor of educational administration, interviewed and collected data from above-average students at 15 urban high schools in the Midwest.

While much has been written about students punished under zero tolerance, this study is one of the first to bring in the voices of well-behaved students, the researchers said.

Zero tolerance is a result of a 1994 federal law that requires all states receiving federal money to require school districts to expel for at least one year any student found to have brought a weapon to school.

School districts across the nation installed zero-tolerance policies that sometimes went further – expelling students for cursing, defiant behavior and bringing over-the-counter medications, for examples.

McNeal said zero tolerance has been starkly criticized by the media, educators and parents for failing to improve school safety.

The students surveyed in this study said zero tolerance is rife with problems, including too few security guards; security guards who are underpaid, lazy or corrupt; nonworking metal detectors; and administrators who show favouritism.

The study has been published in the May issue of the journal Urban Education. (ANI)

‘Attractive’ CEOs earn more

Washington, Apr 27 (ANI): A CEO’s appearance can qualify the executive for a paycheck higher than his less “executive looking” colleague, according to a new study.

In the research, Duke University researchers revealed strong ties between appearance and success in the business world.

By pairing photos of the chief executive officers of large and small companies with photos of non-executives with similar facial features, hairstyles and clothing, finance professors John Graham, Campbell Harvey and Manju Puri of Duke”s Fuqua School of Business found that CEOs are more likely than non-CEOs to be rated as competent looking, but less likely to be classified as likeable.

The trio found that CEOs who appear competent earn more money than less competent-looking CEOs, even though appearance is not associated with measurable differences in company profitability.

“Other researchers have found links between beauty and workers” pay, and demonstrated that politicians benefit from good looks at election time,” Graham said. “We wanted to see whether appearance also plays a role at the corporate executive level.”

The researchers staged a variety of online experiments to ask nearly 2,000 participants to assess photos of more than 100 CEOs and non-executives.

In one experiment, 765 participants were asked to rank the people in each pair of photos according to their attractiveness, competence, trustworthiness and likeability. The actual CEOs were rated as more competent-looking and more attractive. However, CEOs were more frequently rated as less trustworthy and less likable than the non-CEOs with whom their photos were paired.

Similar results were found when 762 participants were asked to rate CEOs of large firms against CEOs of small firms. Large-firm CEOs were rated as more competent 55 percent of the time, while their small-firm counterparts were judged as looking more trustworthy, likeable and attractive.

For the purposes of the experiments, only photos of white male CEOs were used. “It would be fascinating to study the role appearance may play in the careers of women and minorities,” said Puri. “However, because there are fewer female and minority CEOs, including them in our set of photos would have increased the odds of participants recognizing a CEO, which could have inadvertently influenced their rating of the person”s characteristics.”

The team found that CEOs rated competent just by their appearance tended to have higher income. CEOs who were rated four or above on a five-point scale for competence had an average total compensation 7.5 percent higher than CEOs who scored three out of five on competence.

Despite the relationship between appearance and CEO salary, the researchers found no evidence that a CEO”s appearance is related to company profitability.

“I thought the appearance thing was possible for politicians winning elections — but for CEOs, no way,” said Harvey. “We are told that CEOs are very carefully vetted by boards of directors and professional consultants – as they should be for their multi-million dollar jobs. The fact that our research shows that appearance is unquestionably significant turns my stomach.”

“Given there is no relation between appearance and company performance, I hope our research changes the way we select our corporate leaders: ”looks” should not be a factor!” (ANI)

Scientists give evolutionary explanation for fertility problems

Washington, September 9 (ANI): While environmentalists blame pollution and psychiatrists people’s stressful lifestyles for fertility problems in about 10 per cent of all couples hoping for a baby, Tel Aviv University researchers have now come up with a different suggestion.

Dr. Oren Hasson, an evolutionary biologist in the university’s Department of Zoology, says that the reproductive organs of men and women are currently involved in an evolutionary arms race, and the fight is yet not over.

“The rate of human infertility is higher than we should expect it to be. By now, evolution should have improved our reproductive success rate. Something else is going on,” says Dr. Hasson.

The researchers combined empirical evidence with a mathematical model, and came to the conclusion that the bodies of men and women have become reproductive antagonists, not reproductive partners.

Writing in the journal Biological Reviews, Dr. Hasson points out that, over thousands of years of evolution, women’s bodies have forced sperm to become more competitive, rewarding the “super-sperm” – the strongest, fastest swimmers – with penetration of the egg.

The researcher further states that men, in response, are over-producing these aggressive sperm, producing many dozens of millions of them to increase their chances for successful fertilization.

However, according to Dr. Hasson, these evolutionary strategies demonstrate the Law of Unintended Consequences as well.

“It’s a delicate balance, and over time women’s and men’s bodies fine tune to each other. Sometimes, during the fine-tuning process, high rates of infertility can be seen. That’s probably the reason for the very high rates of unexplained infertility in the last decades,” the researcher said.

Dr. Hasson says that the unintended consequences have much to do with timing.

The researcher says that the first sperm to enter and bind with the egg triggers biochemical responses to block other sperm from entering.

This blockade is necessary because a second penetrating sperm would kill the egg, adds the researcher.

However, says Dr. Hasson, in just the few minutes it takes for the blockade to complete, today’s over-competitive sperm may be penetrating, terminating the fertilization just after it’s begun.

Women’s bodies, too, have been developing defences to this condition, known as “polyspermy”.

“To avoid the fatal consequences of polyspermy, female reproductive tracts have evolved to become formidable barriers to sperm. They eject, dilute, divert and kill spermatozoa so that only about a single spermatozoon gets into the vicinity of a viable egg at the right time,” says Dr. Hasson.

The researcher notes that any small improvement in male sperm efficiency is matched by a response in the female reproductive system.

“This fuels the ‘arms race’ between the sexes and leads to the evolutionary cycle going on right now in the entire animal world,” the researcher says.

According to Dr. Hasson, sperm have also become more sensitive to environmental stressors like anxious lifestyles or polluted environments.

“Armed only with short-sighted natural selection, nature could not have foreseen those stressors. This is the pattern of any arms race. A greater investment in weapons and defences entails greater risks and a more fragile equilibrium,” Dr. Hasson argues.

He says that infertile marriages can be stressful, but unlike birds, humans have the capacity for rational thinking.

He advises infertile couples to openly communicate about all their options, and seek counselling if necessary. (ANI)

Some species are unable to adapt to climate change due to their genes

Washington, September 4 (ANI): A new study has determined that species living in restricted environments such as the tropics may lack adequate variation in their genes and be unable to adapt to climate change.

Adaptation is a physiological or behavioural change that makes an organism better suited to its environment, and more likely to survive and reproduce.

Because adaptations usually occur due to a change (or mutation) in a gene, species with a more varied set of genes to begin with, are likely to have a better basis for adaptation.

According to Professor Ary Hoffmann from the Centre for Environmental Stress and Adaptation Research (CESAR), Bio21 Institute, University of Melbourne, the new findings suggest specialist species have a fundamental evolutionary limit, and will be unable to respond to future climate changes.

The work was conducted by a team of Melbourne and Monash University researchers from CESAR.

“Just as variety is the spice of life, the more varied a species’ genetic make-up, the better arsenal it has to respond to change,” said Professor Hoffmann.

Habitat specialists make up most of our earth’s biodiversity, suggesting that this inability to adapt will affect many species including groups of insects, and potentially other groups including mammals and fish.

“This work is important because establishing the genetics linked to species distributions will be useful in assessing and predicting the evolutionary potential of species particularly under climate change. This may in turn assist in conservation efforts and identifying vulnerable groups,” said Professor Hoffmann.

The team used various species of the vinegar fly as a model, examining different species that lived in tropical and more widely distributed environments.

They revealed that the flies living in tropical conditions possessed a narrower set of genes for traits such as tolerance to drying (desiccation) and cold resistance, effectively preventing adaptation.

Although it is well-documented that species distributions become narrower towards the tropics, it was previously thought that all traits are highly variable.

Instead, the new study has found that a species’ range is closely linked to its genetic variation for key traits.

“In essence, we now have a genetic explanation for why species are restricted,” said Professor Hoffmann. (ANI)

Videogame addicts may become problem gamblers

Wellington, Aug 21 (ANI): Teenagers who are addicted to video games are more likely to develop obsessive and antisocial tendencies leading to gambling, says a new research.

A survey of 2669 teenagers aged between 13 and 17 by Adelaide University researchers found 56 per cent had gambled in the past year. The study also revealed that 2.4 per cent became pathological gamblers by the age of 18.

The figure was higher than 2.1 per cent in case of adults who were found to be problem gamblers by the Productivity Commission in 1999. However, the level of harm, like losing a house or a relationship was much lower in case of teens.

The research paper will be published in the Journal of Gambling Studies next month, reports Stuff.co.nz.

The study found that a large numbers of teenagers who played video games later participated in some form of gambling – buying scratchies, playing card games, and playing poker machines.

The study established that teenage problem gamblers played arcade games three times more often than those who did not gamble, and on average they played hand-held games and Internet games more than twice as often.

One of the researchers, associate Professor Paul Delfabbro, noted that teenage boys were more likely to play video games and gamble often, and this was one reason for the relationship.

He said: ”The other reason is that the sorts of kids who are playing video games probably do so because they’ve got less parental supervision…They’re probably bored; they probably don’t have a lot of structured activity in their life.

”So the physical act of playing video games doesn’t increase the risk of gambling but it is indicative of a pattern of leisure activity, which probably means you’re going to find gambling an entertaining activity.” (ANI)

Your computers may soon be having ‘rich interaction’ with you as a partner

Washington, August 20 (ANI): A computer similar to the Hal 9000 system in the movie ’2010′, which claims enjoying working with human beings and having stimulating relationships with them, may soon be created, thanks to a new research project.

Oregon State University researchers are pioneering the concept of “rich interaction” that can pave the way for computers that do want to communicate with, learn from and get to know humans better as persons.

The idea behind this “meaningful” interaction is one of the latest advances in machine learning and artificial intelligence, in which a computer doesn’t just try to learn from its own experiences, it listens to the user, tries to combine what it “hears” with its internal reasoning, and changes its program as a result.

When ordinary users spot the machine’s errors they should be able to step in, and explain directly to the machine the logic it should be using.

“There are limits to what the computer can do just by its own observations and efforts to learn from experiences. It needs to understand not just what it did right or wrong, but why. And for that, it has to continue interacting with human beings and make constant changes in its own programming, based on their feedback,” said Margaret Burnett, an associate professor of computer science at OSU.

According to the researchers, for a computer to be of optimal help to its user, it has to customize itself to the end user and get more personal.

“We all have fairly specific life experiences, personal preferences, ways of doing things, different types of jobs. For machine learning to reach its potential the computer and the user have to interact with each other in a fairly meaningful way, the computer really needs to get to know your situations and understand why it made a mistake, so that it can try not to make the same mistake again,” Burnett said.

The researchers say that a major part of this challenge is to create interactive systems that are easy enough to operate without one needing a computer programmer’s qualification, which they believe may be possible.

Another challenge before the researchers is to ensure that the learning in such systems happens to be a two-way street, as a stubborn human user may insist that the computer “learn” something that is incorrect.

Having recently received a 1million-dollar grant from the National Science Foundation for their research, the OSU researchers now believe that the era of humans as passive observers in the field of artificial intelligence may be coming to a close.

“In the future we believe the computer should be like your partner. You help teach it, it gets to know you, you learn from each other, and it becomes more useful,” Burnett said. (ANI)

Nanotechnology used for developing new DNA cancer test

Washington, Aug 18 (ANI): Johns Hopkins University researchers have developed a highly sensitive test to look for DNA attachments that are believed to be the early warning symptoms of cancer.

The research may make the detection and treatment of cancer much easier.

To reach the conclusion, scientists used tiny crystals called quantum dots.

The test, which detects both the presence and the quantity of certain DNA changes, could alert people who are at risk of developing the disease and could tell doctors how well a particular cancer treatment is working.

The development has been reported in a paper called “MS-qFRET: a quantum dot-based method for analysis of DNA methylation,” published in the August issue of the journal Genome Research. The work also was presented at a conference of the American Association of Cancer Research.

“If it leads to early detection of cancer, this test could have huge clinical implications,” said Jeff Tza-Huei Wang, an associate professor of mechanical engineering whose lab team played a leading role in developing the technique.

“Doctors usually have the greatest success in fighting cancer if they can treat it in its early stage,” the expert added.

To make the scientific breakthrough, Wang and his students developed the test over the past three years with colleagues at the Johns Hopkins Kimmel Cancer Center. (ANI)

Why retroviruses like HIV get easily acquainted with uninfected neighbours

Washington, July 28 (ANI): Yale University researchers have found out why retroviruses like HIV can get easily transmitted when they are next to uninfected cells than if they are floating free in the bloodstream.

The researchers, led by Dr. Walther Mothes at Yale, have made movies of viral activity within cells that help explain why cell-to-cell transmission is so efficient, and provide potential targets for a new generation of AIDS drugs.

“Cell-to-cell transmission is a thousand times more efficient, which is why diseases such as AIDS are so successful and so deadly. And because the retroviruses are already in cells, they are out of reach of the immune system,” said Mothes.

By using imaging technology that can track individual particles of virus in real time, the researchers discovered that infected cells could specifically produce viruses at the point of contact between cells.

They also observed that ten times more of these particles are found at these cellular poles than elsewhere at the surface of cells.

Scientists claimed that the ability of infected cells to specifically produce viruses only at cell-cell interfaces explains how viruses spread so efficiently.

The researchers also identified a possible weakness in the transmission chain.

The team found that viruses express a sticky protein that docks with uninfected cells and then attracts viral assembly to these sites.

If this adhesion molecule lacked a “cytoplasmic tail,” then it would mean that the viral particles did not assemble at the jumping off point between cells.

Mothes is expecting that many more such targets will be identified as scientists work out the mechanics of cell-to-cell transmission.

“We are just opening the door to this whole process. It is a black box, and many, many cellular factors have to be involved in making this happen. Our hope is that somewhere down the road we will have a completely new anti-viral strategy based on targeting cell-to-cell transmission,” said Mothes.

The study has been reported in the open access journal PLoS Biology. (ANI)

How obesity leads to diabetes

Washington, July 9 (ANI): Monash University researchers have found how obesity leads to type 2 diabetes – a finding that could lead to the design of a drug to prevent the disease.

Though obesity is associated as a leading cause of diabetes, no one has understood the exact mechanism of how obesity inhibits the body’s ability to use insulin leading to type 2 diabetes until now.

Now, the research team, led by Associate Professor Matthew Watt, discovered that fat cells release a novel protein called PEDF (pigment epithelium-derived factor), which triggers a chain of events and interactions that lead to development of Type 2 diabetes.

“When PEDF is released into the bloodstream, it causes the muscle and liver to become desensitised to insulin. The pancreas then produces more insulin to counteract these negative effects, ” Watt said.

“This insulin release causes the pancreas to become overworked, eventually slowing or stopping insulin release from the pancreas, leading to Type 2 diabetes.

“It appears that the more fat tissue a person has the less sensitive they become to insulin. Therefore a greater amount of insulin is required to maintain the body’s regulation of blood-glucose.

“Our research was able to show that increasing PEDF not only causes Type 2 diabetes like complications but that blocking PEDF reverses these effects. The body again returned to being insulin-sensitive and therefore did not need excess insulin to remain regulated,” Watt added.

The findings were published today in respected journal Cell Metabolism. (ANI)

Novel anti-infection technology to help soldiers wounded during wars

Washington, July 5 (ANI): Soldiers would soon be able to avoid infection on any injury they sustain during wars, thanks to a new anti-infection technology developed by West Virginia University researchers.

Dr. Bingyun Li, of the university’s Department of Orthopaedics, has revealed that the new technology is basically a drug-delivery system that involves microcapsules and nanocoating, which have been found to work in animal studies.

Writing about their work, the researchers have revealed that their tests have already involved interleukin-12, a drug currently in anti-cancer clinical trials.

“These pioneering techniques could be important to the United States because of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The treatment of battlefield casualties is expensive, and the infection rate runs from 2 percent to 15 percent. In some cases, because the organisms have developed resistance, antibiotics don’t work,” Li says.

“Interleukin-12 will maximize the body’s natural response to an extent where infections can be prevented without the risk of the offending bacteria developing resistance to the treatment, as is becoming more of a problem with antibiotic therapy alone. With nanocoating, the drug is right where it needs to be – at the interface of the implant and your tissue.

“With the microcapsule, the drug can be injected or sprayed where desired, and the nanocoating and microcapsule prolong the half-life of interleukin-12,” the researcher added.

Unlike antibiotic therapy, both methods deliver the interleukin-12 locally rather than spread it throughout the body, and that is why side effects are minimal, Li said.

A research article describing the novel techniques has been published in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research. (ANI)

Chimps can learn to make their own tools watching video demos

London, July 1 (ANI): St Andrews University researchers in Scotland have shown that chimpanzees can be learn how to make their own tools by watching demonstrations on video.

For this work, the researchers trained a chimpanzee to make a long pole for prizing out-of-reach fruit from a tree, and then filmed the animal constructing the handy tool from a variety of different parts.

They say that watching a video of the feat, other chimps were also able to make their own similar tools.

Elizabeth Price, who led the study at the university’s School of Psychology, said that she wanted to discover whether chimps could learn to make a tool from separate parts after watching other animals use materials to improve their lives.

She pointed out that some birds are able to use twigs to pull grubs out of hiding places, and monkeys have been known to strip leaves from branches to fish for termites.

According to her, the findings of her study are “the first evidence that chimpanzees can socially learn how to construct tools,” and show that the animals are more intelligent than previously thought.

“It is very exciting as we didn’t know chimps could do this,” the Scotsman quoted her as saying.

“You could say the videos were like Blue Peter and ‘Here’s one I made earlier’.

“The chimps really needed to see the full instructional video to learn how to make the long tool and gain the reward.

“Most of those who didn’t watch the video, couldn’t make the tool,” she added.

Along with Professor Andrew Whiten of St Andrews University, Elizabeth led an international team of primate experts to uncover the remarkable learning feats of the chimpanzees.

The researchers presented chimpanzees in a primate centre at the University of Texas with a grape that was just out of reach.

They showed some chimps a video of another chimpanzee expertly slotting one stick into another to create a rake, and then using the tool to get the fruit.

Others were shown a shorter video showing a chimpanzee using a ready-made tool.

The researchers found chimpanzees that watched the full video demonstration were able to copy what they saw, and make the tools themselves.

In a follow-up test, since the grapes were put within reach, the use of a longer tool was unnecessary.

The researchers observed that the chimps that had learnt the skill by watching the full video persisted in making the rake, which in the new scenario was more awkward to use.

However, a few individual chimps that had watched the shorter video still managed to make a tool, did not do so when the grape was close enough to reach without help.

Elizabeth said: “These results are important not only because they provide the first evidence that chimpanzees can socially learn how to construct tools, but also because they suggest that social learning can have a potent effect on how an individual approaches related problems later.”

Based on the observations made during the study, she came to the conclusion that learning from others can lead to a less flexible approach to novel situations.

She and her colleagues are now planning to discover the extent to which our own species is vulnerable to a similar effect, by looking at children’s abilities.

Elizabeth added: “Social learning plays a major role in the spread of complex technologies in humans.”

The research has been published in the online edition of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Molecule-size capsules can deliver drugs to targeted cells 100pct efficiently

Washington, June 26 (ANI): Scientists have devised a way to make tiny containers about the size of a virus that can deliver medicines to targeted cells in the bloodstream with almost 100 percent efficiency.

The breakthrough achieved by a collaborative team of Cornell and Shenzhen University researchers gives new hope that this technique may one day be used to deliver vaccines, drugs or genetic material to treat cancer and blood and immunological disorders.

“We can introduce just about any drug or genetic material that can be encapsulated, and it is delivered to any circulating cells that are specifically targeted,” said Michael King, Cornell associate professor of biomedical engineering, who co-authored the study with lead author Zhong Huang, a former Cornell research associate who is now an assistant professor at the Shenzhen University School of Medicine in China.

The technique involves filling the tiny lipid containers, or nanoscale capsules, with a molecular cargo and coating the capsules with adhesive proteins called selectins that specifically bind to target cells.

A shunt coated with the capsules is then inserted between a vein and an artery. Much as burrs attach to clothing in a field, the selectin-coated capsules adhere to targeted cells in the bloodstream.

After rolling along the shunt wall, the cells break free from the wall with the capsules still attached and ingest their contents.

The study shows that since only the targeted cells ingest the contents of the nanocapsules, the technique could greatly reduce the adverse side effects caused by some drugs.

The study also shows that genetic material can be delivered to targeted cells to turn off specific genes and interfere with processes that lead to disease.

The researchers filled nanocapsules with a small-interfering RNA (siRNA) and targeted them to specific circulating cells. When the targeted cells ingested the capsules, the siRNA turned off a gene that produces an enzyme that contributes to the degradation of cartilage in arthritis.

King said that in a similar manner, the method could be used to target the delivery of chemotherapy drugs, vaccine antigens to white blood cells, specific molecules that mitigate autoimmune disorders and more.

The research has been published online at the Web site of the journal Gene Therapy. (ANI)

Scientists suggest new animal model to test carcinogen risk

Washington, June 19 (ANI): Researchers at Oregon State University have suggested a new and improved method to test carcinogen risk.

They said that trout can be a superior animal model than laboratory rats, and other traditional methods of assessing the risk of carcinogens.

“The whole foundation of modern toxicology is that the dose makes the poison,” said George Bailey, an OSU distinguished professor emeritus of molecular and environmental toxicology.

“You can die from eating a few tablespoons of ordinary table salt at one time, but that doesn’t mean that table salt is a poison at the doses that humans normally consume.

“With compounds that we know can cause cancer, the real question is how much is too much.

“What we have found is that traditional approaches to making that evaluation, which are almost always based on studies done at very high doses with laboratory rodents, may not always give us answers that are reasonably accurate,” he added.

Researchers are usually trying to determine what can cause cancer at levels considered unacceptable.

However, the age-old problem they have faced is the cost and laboratory logistics making it virtually impossible to test millions of rats.

“When using rodents, it simply was not possible to study larger numbers of animals, the cost was too prohibitive,” said Linus Pauling Institute at OSU.

The Oregon State University researchers have revealed that rainbow trout may for many purposes be as or more accurate in determining what compounds, at what levels, can pose a risk of human cancer.

They have pioneered the use of trout for studies of this type for 40 years, and researchers believe that it may now be time to greatly expand the use of that research.

“We can do experiments with trout in large numbers at very low cost, about 5 percent of what a rodent study would cost,” she said.

“For most studies of carcinogens, exposing 2,000 rodents would be a huge project. For us, working with 2,000 trout is a pilot study,” she added.

The OSU scientists recently completed the largest study ever done with animals in toxicology, exposing 40,800 trout to what’s considered an “ultra-low” dose of dibenzo-a,l-pyrene, a chemical that can cause liver cancer and is part of a broad field of toxic compounds called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, or PAHs.

The study determined that a tolerable threshold for human exposure to this toxic chemical would be 500 to 1,500 times higher than is outlined by the Environmental Protection Agency.(ANI)

Ageing brain allows negative memories to fade

London, May 23 (ANI): Ageing brains allow bad memories to lose colour, leaving a twisted impression of how grand life was in early days, researchers have found.

It is generally believed that as people get older they learn to be less affected by negative detail. Therefore, Duke University researchers embarked on a journey to find why elderly tend to view the past through rose-tinted spectacles, reports The Daily Express.

The research also found older adults had fewer connections between an area of the brain that generates emotions and a region involved in memory and learning.

They have more connections between the area that detects emotion and one that controls it.

Report author Professor Roberto Cabeza said: “Older people dwell in a world with a lot of negatives, so perhaps they have learned to reduce the impact and remember in a different way.” (ANI)

Your photos remain on Facebook even after they have been deleted

London, May 21 (ANI): A new research has found that many social networking sites, including Facebook, continue to carry photographs of their users even after they have deleted them.

Cambridge University researchers put photos on 16 popular websites, noted the web addresses where the images were stored, and then deleted them.

The team revealed that they were still able to find the deleted photos on seven sites after 30 days, using the direct URLs to the photos from the sites’ content delivery networks.

The researchers said that these links continue to work even though a typical user might think the photos had been removed.

“This demonstrates how social networking sites often take a lazy approach to user privacy, doing what’s simpler rather than what is correct,” the BBC quoted Joseph Bonneau, one of the PhD students who carried out the study, as saying.

“It’s imperative to view privacy as a design constraint, not a legal add-on,” he said.

But a Facebook spokesman has defended the company’s approach, insisting the photos are removed instantly.

“When a user deletes a photograph from Facebook it is removed from our servers immediately,” the spokesman said.

“However, URLs to photographs may continue to exist on the Content Delivery Network (CDN) after users delete them from Facebook, until they are overwritten.

“Overwriting usually happens after a short period of time,” he added.

The researchers said that special photo-sharing sites, such as Flickr and Google’s Picasa, did better and Microsoft’s Windows Live Spaces removed the photos instantly. (ANI)

Brain likely perceives cocaine to be a reward

Washington, May 20 (ANI): McGill University researchers have opened up a new path for cocaine addiction research by suggesting that the brain likely perceives it to be a reward.

The researchers have found that sniffing cocaine triggers high levels of dopamine secretion in a central region of the brain called the striatum.

They say that the significance of this finding lies in the fact that dopamine is known to play a critical role in the brain’s response to reward and addictive drugs.

Lead researcher Dr. Marco Leyton, of the Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI), has revealed that the study involved 10 non-addicted users of cocaine, all of whom sniffed cocaine on one test day and placebo powder on another.

The participants underwent blood tests before and after taking the drug, and dopamine release in the brain was measured using PET scans.

“The ability of cocaine to activate dopamine release varies markedly from person to person. Our study suggests that this is related to how much of the drug the person consumed in the past,” said Dr. Leyton.

The more cocaine someone has used in his or her lifetime, the more the brain will secrete dopamine during subsequent cocaine use.

“It’s possible therefore that the intensity of the reward-circuit response is related to increased susceptibility to addiction,” said Dr. Leyton.

The researchers admit that though their study has demonstrated the relationship between the intensity of dopamine secretion and the frequency of drug use, they still do not fully understand its mechanism of action.

They, however, say that the relationship between dopamine and cocaine means that this hormone could be a potential target for treatment against addiction.

A research article on the study has been published in the journal Biological Psychiatry. (ANI)

X-box, PlayStation to mimic real stench of war

London, May 18 (ANI): X-box and PlayStation lovers would soon be turning their bedrooms into battlefields, courtesy the new technique that will allow games consoles to mimic the stench of war.

The new technology developed by Birmingham University researchers will allow the players to sniff out cordite, diesel fumes, and burning rubber.

It will also be used in soldier training, reports the Sun.

The compressed air would pump out smells from pots of wax.

The console makers would be using the stench on Halo Wars games or the Call of Duty series. (ANI)

Folic acid ‘prevents congenital heart defects’

London, May 15 (ANI): While fortifying grain products with folic acid has been found to be effective in preventing neural tube defects in Canada, scientists have now found that this form of vitamin B also prevents congenital heart defects.

McGill University researchers in Montreal have found in a study that folic acid decreases the incidence of congenital heart defects by more than 6 percent.

Since December 1998, all grain products sold in Canada have been fortified with folic acid with 0.15 mg of folate per 100 g of flour.

With the help of provincial databases, the researchers showed that the rate of congenital heart defects between 1999 and 2005 was 1.47 per 1000 births compared to 1.64 per 1000 births between 1990 and 1999 for a decrease of 6.2 percent per year after 1999.

Despite the success of this initiative, prevention efforts are still necessary to encourage future mothers to take folic acid supplements.

“The level of fortification was established to avoid negative side effects in the general population,” said Raluca Ionescu-Ittu, a PhD candidate on the team.

“However, this level is not quite sufficient for women planning a pregnancy, who should start taking folic acid supplements at least three months before becoming pregnant,” Ionescu-Ittu added.

The study has been published in the British Medical Journal. (ANI)

Scientists identify promising compound to treat epilepsy

Washington, May 5 (ANI): Scientists have identified a new anticonvulsant compound, called paxilline, which may cease the progression of epilepsy, a neurological disorder marked by abnormal electrical activity in the brain that leads to recurring seizures.

The study by Carnegie Mellon University researchers is based on a previous work in which scientists identified a specific molecular target whose increased activity is linked with seizure disorders- a potassium channel known as the BK channel.
“We have found a new anticonvulsant compound that eliminates seizures in a model of epilepsy,” said Alison Barth, associate professor of biological sciences at Carnegie Mellon’s Mellon College of Science.

She added: “The drug works by inhibiting ion channels whose role in epilepsy was only recently discovered. Understanding how these channels work in seizure disorders, and being able to target them with a simple treatment, represents a significant advance in our ability to understand and treat epilepsy.” he researchers found that after a first seizure, BK channel function was markedly enhanced.

Thus, the neurons became overly excitable and were firing with more speed, intensity and spontaneity, which led the researchers to believe that the abnormal increase in the activity of the channels might play a role in causing subsequent seizures and the emergence of epilepsy. n the current study, the researchers tested this theory by blocking the ion channels using a BK-channel antagonist called paxilline.

Using an experimental model for epilepsy, Barth tested whether paxilline could reduce or prevent experimentally induced seizures, as it could normalize aberrant brain activity induced by previous seizures.

And to their surprise, the researchers discovered that the compound was effective at completely blocking subsequent seizures. The drug is orally available, and works in the low nanomolar range,” said Barth.

As the drug is effective in low concentrations and can be taken as a pill, it could turn out to be an especially promising compound for treatment in epilepsy patients.

The researchers believe that targeting the BK channels and the abnormal brain activity that they induce might one day be used as a way to prevent the progression of seizure disorders over time, thus attacking the root cause of epilepsy.

The findings have been published in the current issue of the journal Epilepsia. (ANI)

Comets may have provided key ingredients for life on Earth

Tel Aviv, April 29 (ANI): A new study by researchers at Tel Aviv University in Israel has suggested that comets might have provided the elements for the emergence of life on our planet.

While investigating the chemical make-up of comets, Professor Akiva Bar-Nun of the Department of Geophysics and Planetary Sciences at Tel Aviv University found they were the source of missing ingredients needed for life in Earth’s ancient primordial soup.

“When comets slammed into the Earth through the atmosphere about four billion years ago, they delivered a payload of organic materials to the young Earth, adding materials that combined with Earth’s own large reservoir of organics and led to the emergence of life,” said Professor Bar-Nun.

It was the chemical composition of comets that allowed them to kickstart life, he added.

Using a one-of-a-kind machine built at Tel Aviv University, researchers were able to simulate comet ice, and found that comets contain ingredients necessary for providing the basic nutrients of life.

Specifically, Prof. Bar-Nun looked at the noble gases Argon, Krypton and Xenon, because they do not interact with any other elements and are not destroyed by Earth’s oxygen.

These elements have maintained stable proportions in the Earth’s atmosphere throughout the lifetime of the planet, he explained.

“Now, if we look at these elements in the atmosphere of the Earth and in meteorites, we see that neither is identical to the ratio in the sun’s composition. Moreover, the ratios in the atmosphere are vastly different than the ratios in meteorites which make up the bulk of the Earth,” said Bar-Nun.

“So we need another source of noble gases which, when added to these meteorites or asteroid influx, could change the ratio. And this came from comets,” he added.

During the comets’ formation, the porous ice trapped gases and organic chemicals that were present in outer space.

“The pattern of trapping of noble gases in the ice gives a certain ratio of Argon to Krypton to Xenon, and this ratio – together with the ratio of gases that come from rocky bodies – gives us the ratio that we observe in the atmosphere of the Earth,” said Bar-Nun.

Thus, the arrival on Earth of comets and asteroids led to the necessary ratio of materials for organic life, “which eventually were dissolved in the ocean and started the long process leading to the emergence of life on Earth,” he added. (ANI)