Mozilla re-patches Firefox 3.6 to fix plug-in problem

For the second time in two months, Mozilla on Friday rushed out a fix for Firefox to patch a problem with a browser update issued just days before.

Mozilla shipped Firefox 3.6.8 on Friday to patch a single security problem and deal with what Mike Beltzner, director of Firefox, called “a stability problem that affected some pages with embedded plug-ins.”

The company had released Firefox 3.6.7 two days earlier .

Mozilla patched one critical security bug in the newest update, according to an advisory also published Friday. “In certain circumstances, properties in the plug-in instance’s parameter array could be freed prematurely, leaving a dangling pointer that the plug-in could execute, potentially calling into attacker-controlled memory,” the warning read.

The bug surfaced in one of the 16 patches that Mozilla applied to Firefox earlier in the week.

Details of that vulnerability, and the stability problem that Beltzner mentioned, were not available to the public as of Saturday.

Several Firefox users, however, had filed numerous reports to the browser’s support forum of problems with Adobe’s Flash Player plug-in after updating to Firefox 3.6.7.

“I updated Firefox from 3.6.2 to 3.6.7 and I REGRET IT!,” wrote a user identified only as “Steve” in a support forum message posted Friday morning. “I can’t watch YouTube. Every time the video is about to start Firefox freezes and I can’t do nothing besides going into Task Manager and killing it from there. THIS SUCKS!”

Friday’s patch-and-release was the second in two months for Mozilla. Just three days after updating Firefox to version 3.6.4 in late June, Mozilla delivered another update because people playing Farmville complained that their browser was shutting down the Facebook game. The company said that a new “out of process plug-ins” feature, designed to keep the browser running when a plug-in crashed, was kicking in too quickly.

The older Firefox 3.5 browser, which was upgraded to version 3.5.11 last Tuesday, is not affected by the security bug or the plug-in stability problem.

Users can update to Firefox 3.6.8 by downloading the new edition or by selecting “Check for Updates” from the Help menu in the browser.

Read more about browsers in Computerworld’s Browsers Topic Center.

Consumer”s “positivity bubble” easy to burst

Washington, April 20(ANI): People build a “positivity bubble” while choosing between two good products. However, a new study has found that it is quite easy to burst the bubble.

Ab Litt and Zakary L. Tormala from Stanford University have explained the phenomenon in the new study.

Tormala said: “From routine cereal-aisle shopping to expensive big-ticket purchases, consumers are often free to choose among many similarly attractive options.

“In these contexts, it can be difficult to resolve one”s preferences to arrive at a purchasing decision.”

When decisions are difficult because the choices are equally appealing, people often become more positive in their attitudes and behaviors toward their chosen option after they choose it. But the authors found that this enhancement of a product is surprisingly fragile, and collapses easily in the face of even minor negative information about it.

The authors wrote: “We show that the process is more like inflating a ”positivity bubble,” where there”s an appearance of strong positive attitudes, but which masks a heightened vulnerability to ultimately collapsing.”

In three experiments, researchers asked consumers to make easy or difficult decisions to select one of two products (digital cameras or car stereos). Easy decisions were between a liked and disliked option, based on participants” earlier ranking of products. Difficult decisions were between two options that were ranked and liked similarly in that earlier stage.

The experts added: “Difficult decision scenarios with heightened stakes-such as shopping for expensive durable goods, choosing a gift for a loved one, or choosing a job, college, or house-are precisely those in which people would most hope to have accurate and stable attitudes.

“Perversely, our results suggest that in these cases their attitudes might actually be the most fragile and bubble-like, appearing strong but actually quite vulnerable to collapse.”

They concluded: “For consumers, our results suggest that the motivation to enhance and build up products chosen with difficulty (especially in important decisions) might boost happiness with them in the short term, but carry the risk of even greater dissatisfaction over time and experience.”

The study has been published in the Journal of Consumer Research. (ANI)

ANALYSIS – Electric cars win hype, staying power questioned

Electric cars are riding high, as incentives and new models make them a realistic option, but the fresh attention may highlight flaws compared with gasoline and alternatives such as biofuels.

The attention rankles with some in the biofuel industry, whose own hype was abruptly halted by a glut of production in 2007, subsequent bankruptcies and a fall from grace after a link was drawn — which they dispute — between biofuels and spiralling food prices and rising hunger.

Gasoline may beat off both alternatives for decades as the least-worst option, with wider adoption of more efficient conventional cars helping to curb carbon emissions and oil dependence.

The uncertainty is striking for a $5-6 trillion global auto and fuel supply market, where there is agreement only that the number of cars will keep rising, perhaps doubling to 2 billion by 2050.

The momentum is with electricity, following an oil price spike in 2008, lavish government incentives and a crippling downturn across the wider car industry. Last week the United States finalised fuel efficiency standards, following similar rules in Europe.

Green cars grabbed centre stage at auto shows this year in New York, Geneva and Detroit, including all-battery cars, hybrid varieties that switch between electric and gasoline, and small, more fuel-efficient conventional cars.

EXPENSIVE

But battery electric vehicles (EVs) are expensive.

Mitsubishi Motors and Nissan Motor Co last week announced prices for their i-MiEV and Leaf battery-only electric cars, in production already or about to debut, at 3.98 million yen ($42,520) and 3.76 million yen respectively before state subsidies, several times the cost of equivalent cars.

Reality bites with driving ranges of about 100 miles (160.9 km), far less than for a petrol car which U.S. customers expect to exceed 300 miles.

And electric cars have to contend with the multi-billion-dollar cost of a new charging infrastructure, although they benefit from running costs at about a quarter of gasoline at today’s prices, according to electric car advocates.

“The electric vehicle sector certainly has momentum, but it’s questionable whether it has the legs for the longer term, at least at the moment, and whether it has enough scale,” said Peter Wells at Cardiff University’s Centre for Automotive Industry Research, who expected big cost reductions.

Success depends on drivers accepting limitations on range and on re-charging time, which takes several hours, said Pierre Gaudillat, research and development manager at the UK-funded Carbon Trust.

“I don’t see any major breakthrough on the horizon,” he said. Customers may have to compromise on what they expect from a car, perhaps tailored for commuting, and from ownership, for example buying the car but renting the expensive battery.

Hybrid gasoline-electric cars overcome the range problem but are still pricey because of their complexity and battery costs.

Sales of hybrid-electric vehicles are expected to reach about 1.3 percent of an estimated 67 million light vehicle sales this year, according to the information company J.D. Power and Associates.

Battery-powered, all electric vehicles (EV) will only amount to about 20,000 units, but by 2015 could reach a 0.3 percent market share.

The International Energy Agency says EV and hybrids must reach at least 7 percent of global car sales by 2020 to hit targets to avoid more dangerous climate change.

Global biofuel production, meanwhile, will grow 16 percent in 2010, according to the Global Renewable Fuels Alliance.

Gasoline may continue to dominate both, especially if oil price rises are muted by efficiency drives. Automakers are already making smaller engines more powerful and transmissions more efficient, while the carbon emissions savings of both electric and biofuels are disputed.

“I think oil-based transport fuels have such a competitive advantage and dominance that you need a compelling argument to move to something different, and the case has not been made for what that is,” said Chris Mottershead, vice principal of research and innovation at King’s College London, and former head of climate change at oil major BP.

POSITIVE

Technologies to replace gasoline enthuse investors, even those doubtful of any climate threat, given the vulnerability of the United States and others to oil prices. The United States imports over half the petroleum it consumes.

HSBC is one backer of electric, investing $125 million in January in Better Place, a California-based company that wants to build charging networks and lease batteries to customers.

HSBC climate change analyst Nick Robins stressed a wider benefit, or “positive spill-over”, from electric cars which he contrasted with the negative wider impact of biofuels. Car batteries could help balance electric grids that are increasingly dependent on intermittent wind, by re-charging at night, Robins said.

Biofuels are made from sugar, corn and oil seeds now, and perhaps in the future from grass, crop waste and wood. Rising biofuel demand has stoked prices of feedstocks such as corn, but may only have played a small part in the 2008 food price spike, analysts say.

The oil major Royal Dutch Shell is a big backer of ethanol, striking a deal in February with Brazil’s Cosan to create a $21 billion a year ethanol joint venture.

Ethanol made from Brazil’s sugar cane is economic at an oil price of $40-50 a barrel, compared with $80 oil prices now. That has created an autos market in Brazil where most new cars are flex-fuel, handling any blend of gasoline and ethanol, at no extra cost.

(Editing by Anthony Barker)

(For more business news on Reuters Money visit http://www.reutersmoney.in)

Teens who think they’ll die young more likely to engage in risky behaviour

Washington, July 3 (ANI): One in seven adolescents think they’re going to die young, leading many to drug use, suicide attempts and other unsafe behaviour, a new research has suggested.

University of Minnesota Medical School researcher Iris Borowsky, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues analyzed data collected by the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a nationally representative sample of more than 20,000 youth in grades 7 through 12 during three separate study years. In the first set of interviews, nearly 15 percent of adolescents predicted they had a 50/50 chance or less of living to age 35.

The researchers found that those who engaged in risky behaviours such as illicit drug use, suicide attempts, fighting, or unsafe sexual activity in the first year were more likely in subsequent years to believe they would die at a young age.

Vice versa, those who predicted that they’d die young during the first interview were more likely in later years to begin engaging in these same risky behaviors and have poor health outcomes, the researchers found.

Notably, these teens were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with HIV/AIDS just six years later, regardless of their sexual preference.

“While conventional wisdom says that teens engage in risky behaviours because they feel invulnerable to harm, this study suggests that in some cases, teens take risks because they overestimate their vulnerability, specifically their risk of dying,” Borowsky said.

“These youth may take risks because they feel hopeless and figure that not
much is at stake,” Borowsky added.

Nearly 25 percent of youth living in households that receive public assistance and more than 29 percent of American-Indian, 26 percent of African-American, 21 percent of Hispanic, and 15 percent of Asian youth reported believing they would die young-compared to just 10 percent of their Caucasian peers.

“Our findings reinforce the importance of instilling a sense of hope and optimism in youth.

Strong connections with parents, families, and schools, as well as positive media messages, are likely important factors in developing an optimistic outlook for young people,” Borowsky said.

There was no significant relationship between perceived risk of dying before age 35 and actual death from all causes during the six-year study period.

The study has been published in the July issue of Paediatrics. (ANI)

Babies born by C-section ‘at increased asthma risk’

London, June 30 (ANI): Babies born by ceasarean section are more susceptible to developing diseases including asthma and diabetes, according to a new research.

And scientists hold stress experienced by children during the operation responsible for making genetic changes that lead to the vulnerability, reports The Telegraph.

In the study, researchers found that the babies have important differences in their white blood cells, a crucial part of the immune system.

Prof Mikael Norman, a paediatric specialist, from the Karolinska Institute, in Stockholm, said: “Delivery by C-section has been associated with increased allergy, diabetes and leukaemia risks.

“Although the underlying cause is unknown, our theory is that altered birth conditions could cause a genetic imprint in the immune cells that could play a role later in life.”

He added: “When babies are delivered by C-section, they are unprepared for the birth and can become more stressed after delivery than before.

“This is different to a normal delivery, where the stress gradually builds up before the actual birth, helping the baby to start breathing and quickly adapt to the new environment outside the womb.”

To reach the conclusion, the study looked at blood samples from 37 newborn infants, looking for differences in the make up of the DNA in their white blood cells.

The study has been published in the journal Acta Paediatrica. (ANI)

Teens who think they’ll die young more likely to engage in unsafe behaviour

Washington, June 29 (ANI): One in seven adolescents believe think they’re going to die young, leading many to drug use, suicide attempts and other unsafe behaviour, a new research has suggested.

University of Minnesota Medical School researcher Iris Borowsky, M.D., Ph.D., and colleagues analyzed data collected by the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, a nationally representative sample of more than 20,000 youth in grades 7 through 12 during three separate study years. In the first set of interviews, nearly 15 percent of adolescents predicted they had a 50/50 chance or less of living to age 35.

The researchers found that those who engaged in risky behaviours such as illicit drug use, suicide attempts, fighting, or unsafe sexual activity in the first year were more likely in subsequent years to believe they would die at a young age.

Vice versa, those who predicted that they’d die young during the first interview were more likely in later years to begin engaging in these same risky behaviors and have poor health outcomes, the researchers found.

Notably, these teens were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with HIV/AIDS just six years later, regardless of their sexual preference.

“While conventional wisdom says that teens engage in risky behaviours because they feel invulnerable to harm, this study suggests that in some cases, teens take risks because they overestimate their vulnerability, specifically their risk of dying,” Borowsky said.

“These youth may take risks because they feel hopeless and figure that not
much is at stake,” Borowsky added.

Nearly 25 percent of youth living in households that receive public assistance and more than 29 percent of American-Indian, 26 percent of African-American, 21 percent of Hispanic, and 15 percent of Asian youth reported believing they would die young-compared to just 10 percent of their Caucasian peers.

“Our findings reinforce the importance of instilling a sense of hope and optimism in youth. Strong connections with parents, families, and schools, as well as positive media messages, are likely important factors in developing an optimistic outlook for young people,” Borowsky said.

There was no significant relationship between perceived risk of dying before age 35 and actual death from all causes during the six-year study period. (ANI)

Why sleep deprivation affects some people more than others

Washington, June 25 (ANI): Conducting a new imaging research, scientists have explained why sleep deprivation affects some people more than others.

Researchers observed that people who are genetically vulnerable to sleep loss showed reduced brain activity after staying awake all night, while those who are genetically resilient showed expanded brain activity.

The findings help explain individual differences in the ability to compensate for lack of sleep.

“The extent to which individuals are affected by sleep deprivation varies, with some crashing out and others holding up well after a night without sleep,” said Dr. Michael Chee, at the Duke-National University of Singapore Graduate Medical School.

In the current study, the researchers, led by Dr. Pierre Maquet, at the University of Liege in Belgium selected study participants based on their genes.

Previous research showed that the PERIOD3 (PER3) gene predicts how people will respond to sleep deprivation. People carry either long or short variants of the gene.

Those with the short PER3 variant are resilient to sleep loss – they perform well on cognitive tasks after sleep deprivation.

However, those with the long PER3 variant are vulnerable – they show deficits in cognitive performance after sleep deprivation. Now the new study explains why.

The authors imaged study participants while they did a working memory task that requires attention and cognitive control – also called executive function.

They found that the resilient, short gene variant group compensated for sleep loss by “recruiting” extra brain structures.

Besides brain structures normally activated by the cognitive task, these participants showed increased activity in other frontal, temporal, and subcortical brain structures after a sleepless night.

On the other hand, after a sleepless night, vulnerable participants, the long PER3 group, showed reduced activity in brain structures normally activated by the task.

These participants also showed reduced brain activity in one brain structure – the right posterior inferior frontal gyrus – after a normal waking day.

The above data is consistent with previous research suggesting that people with the long gene variant perform better on executive tasks earlier, but not later, in the day.

“Our study uncovers some of the networks underlying individual differences in sleep loss vulnerability and shows for the first time how genetic differences in brain activity associate with cognitive performance and fatigue. The data also provide a basis for the development of measures to counteract individual cognitive deficits associated with sleep loss,” said study author Maquet.

The study is published in the latest issue of The Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

Gordon Brown to appoint Britain’s first cyber security chief

London, June 24 (ANI): The British Prime Minister is set to announce the appointment of the nation’s first cyber security chief who will be responsible to protect the country from terrorist computer hackers and electronic espionage.

Brown’s decision comes amid fears that the computer systems of government and business are vulnerable to online attacks from hostile countries and terrorist organisations.

Neil Thompson, a senior civil servant, will be charged with protecting the national computer network, The Independent reports.

Just a month back, US President Barack Obama had declared that he was making it a “national security priority” to protect the US computer network from attack, and that he would set up a “cyber security office” in the White House.

Brown’s plans were endorsed by the Cabinet on Monday, after a presentation by the Security minister, Lord West of Spithead.

Concern has grown in Whitehall that hackers are targeting its computer systems, and those of Britain’s largest companies.

In August 2008, the Government’s first national risk register highlighted Britain’s vulnerability by cyber spies.

“The UK does remain subject to high levels of covert non-military activity by foreign intelligence organisations. They are increasingly combining traditional intelligence methods with new technical attacks,” it said.

The security services are also fighting a constant war in cyberspace against extremist Islamist Internet sites, that attempt to radicalise young people or co-ordinate attacks.

Officials have said the biggest threat comes from China, but they have also expressed worries about the activities of criminal gangs based in Russia.

Britain has discussed ways of boosting computer security with foreign allies including the US. (ANI)

Risk factor for obsessive-compulsive disorder identified

Melbourne, May 29 (ANI): Kids with impaired thought processes are more likely to develop obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) as adults, according to a new study.

The study, conducted by Dr Jessica Grisham from the University of New South Wales, suggests that people at risk of developing OCD could now be identified during childhood.

OCD is an anxiety disorder where sufferers have repetitive and intrusive thoughts or images. The thoughts are often combined with compulsions, such as cleaning, to reduce the anxiety.

For the study, researchers used data from a longitudinal study in Dunedin, New Zealand that has been following 1000 children from birth.

Of the 700 participants who continued with the study, 2 percent developed OCD by age 32.

Grisham says that the study reviewed how the OCD group performed in a series of cognitive tests conducted when they were aged 13.

She says that looking at the children’s performance on these tests predicts whether they will have OCD in adulthood almost 20 years later.

“Children who struggled with certain tasks, particularly visuospatial skills like being able to manipulate in your mind the orientation of different figures, had a much higher risk of having OCD at age 32,” ABC Science quoted her as saying.

In fact all 13 adults who developed OCD performed poorly in these tests as teenagers, the study found.

However, Grisham insists that it isn’t given that any child who doesn’t perform well in specific cognitive assessments will develop OCD.

“There are people who perform poorly on these tests and don’t go onto develop OCD, so we like to think of it as an indicator of vulnerability. Things in the environment or stressful events might activate their vulnerability,” she said.

The study has been published in The British Journal of Psychiatry. (ANI)

Oil hunters started decimating whale populations as early as 1800

Washington, May 25 (ANI): One of several astonishing reconstructions of ocean life in olden days suggests that about the ocean around New Zealand teemed with about 27,000 southern right whales, about 30 times as many as today, before oil hunters started to whaling in the early 1800s.

The researchers set to make a presentation on the reconstruction at a Census of Marine Life conference, which runs from May 26 to 28, say that at about the same time, large pods of blue whales and orcas, blue sharks and thresher sharks darkened the waters off Cornwall, England, herds of harbour porpoise pursued fish upriver, and dolphins regularly played in waters inshore.

Census researchers are using such diverse sources as old ship logs, literary texts, tax accounts, newly translated legal documents and even mounted trophies to piece together images of fish of such sizes, abundance and distribution in ages past that they stagger modern imaginations.

They are also documenting the timelines over which those giant marine life populations declined.

Researchers James Barrett and Jen Harland of Cambridge University, Cluny Johnstone of York University, and Mike Richards of Germany-based Max Planck Institute reckon that a shift from eating locally-caught freshwater to marine fish species occurred around 1000 AD.

Their surmise is said to be consistent with analyses of scientifically-dated fish remains and historical data from England and northwestern Europe showing smaller freshwater fish and fewer species availability in early medieval times, likely caused by increased exploitation and pollution.

Meanwhile, Maria Lucia De Nicolo of the University of Bologna has established that new fishing boats and equipment invented in the 1500s made it possible to venture from coastal to deep sea fishing.

She says that the real revolution in marine fishing happened in the mid-1600s when pairs of boats began dragging a net.

Andy Rosenberg of the University of New Hampshire, a leader of the Census’ History of Marine Animal Population (HMAP) project and chair of the conference, says that new insights allowed by centuries of information are upending modern notions of “natural” marine life sizes, abundance, habitats and vulnerability, and causing authorities to revisit marine baselines.

The researchers believe that these insights may turn out to be useful for policy makers, who plan to use the results as a realistic baseline against which the current and future status of the marine ecosystem can be gauged.

Ian Poiner, Chair of the Census Scientific Steering Committee, says: “The insights emerging from this research of the past provide a new context for contemporary ocean management. nderstanding the magnitude and drivers of change long ago is essential to accurately interpret today’s trends and to make future projections.” (ANI)

Hackers can’t hack top-secret data of military: Internet scientist

Beijing, May 21 (ANI): An acclaimed Internet scientist has said that there is no way hackers could access top-secret data by penetrating the firewalls of military on government networks.

Former National Computer Network Emergency response team’s Director Professor Fang Binxing said there is no scientific basis to blame either China’s military or the government for hacking other nations’ networks because most of them are “out of reach”.

Binxing’s statement came after the foreign media blamed the Chinese authorities of infiltrating military networks and government computers in more than 100 countries.

A specialist on Internet security said that Networks containing sensitive intelligence are impenetrable, because the militaries isolate their networks completely from the public domain to prevent hacking.

“If there have been cases of key intelligence being stolen, I believe there would have been undercover agents within the organizations facilitating the theft you cannot simply do it with computer technology,” he added.

Fang Xingdong, a Beijing-based Internet technology expert, said China has become a staging post for hackers worldwide, who use the country’s network security vulnerability to launch attacks on other countries.

“Hackers often use computers based in China as their ‘springboard’. That makes it confusing even for the US military,” he added.

According to an Internet security report released on April 15 by Symantec, the California-based anti-virus software maker, about 71 percent of the computers hacked in the Asia-Pacific region are based in China, which has a cyber population of 300 million.

At the same time, 38 percent of hacking attempts worldwide originate in the US, compared with 13 percent in China, the report said.

“The US military is picking on China because it wants to make its claims appear more plausible,” Fang Binxing said.

Canadian-based researchers have also claimed that a cyber spy network based mainly in China hacked into classified documents from government and private organizations in 103 countries, including the computers of the Dalai Lama and Tibetan exiles.

The researchers also dubbed the alleged infiltration “GhostNet” but “whether it’s called ‘GhostNet’ or something else, it’s just an expression, not a technical term in any sense,” Fang said.

The academician also rebutted reports by foreign newspapers claiming that China’s indigenously-built security operating system “Kylin” has links to military use. (ANI)

Salmonella’s sweet tooth may pave way for a vaccine against it

Washington, May 20 (ANI): British scientists have, for the first time, discovered that the food oisoning bug Salmonella has an affiliation for glucose-a vulnerability that could actually provide new way to vaccinate against it.

They say that the discovery of Salmonella’s sweet tooth may also lead to vaccine strains to rotect against other disease-causing bacteria, including superbugs.

“This is the first time that anyone has identified the nutrients that sustain Salmonella while it is nfecting a host’s body,” said Dr. Arthur Thompson from the Institute of Food Research.

During infection, Salmonella bacteria immune cells engulf them in a bid to destroy them.

But the bacteria instead have a tendency to multiply, for which they must acquire nutrients.

Focussing their study on glycolysis, the process by which sugars are broken down to create hemical energy, the researchers constructed Salmonella mutants unable to transport glucose nto the immune cells they occupy and unable to use glucose as food.

The mutant strains lost their ability to replicate within immune cells, which made them harmless

“Our experiments showed that glucose is the major sugar used by Salmonella during infection,” aid Thompson.

The mutant strains still stimulate the immune system, and the scientists have filed patents on hem, which could be used to develop vaccines to protect people and animals against poisoning y fully virulent Salmonella.

Glycolysis occurs in most organisms, including other bacteria that occupy host cells, and thus isrupt how the bacteria metabolise glucose could be used to create vaccine strains for other athogenic bacteria, including superbugs.

The harmless strains could also be used as vaccine vectors. (ANI)

Ex-Premier League star warns of players’ vulnerability to serious crime

London, May 19 (ANI): A former Premier League player, who has just been released from prison after serving four years of an eight-year term for his involvement in a drugs ring, has said that football players in England are surrounded by gangsters who pose a threat to their reputations and tempt many towards criminality.

Mark Ward – once of Everton, West Ham and Manchester City – has claimed that players have never been more at risk from “criminal elements” than they are today.

Speaking exclusively to The Independent, Ward, who is still in touch with the football community and remains friendly with the families of high-profile players including Steven Gerrard and Joey Barton.

“It’s obvious to me that the more money that comes into football the more of a buzz it will give the gangsters to be involved. To my knowledge there are current Premier League players who are friends with gangsters. There are certain individuals that will be getting looked after – by that I mean if players are in any trouble they know the right people to go to,” he said.

“It will be a rare day that a Premier League player can go from morning to night and not be introduced to or speak to somebody who’s involved in the drugs trade or some other form of criminality. That was true for me, especially growing up in Huyton [on Merseyside], where you socialise daily with people involved in crime,” he added.

Ward, 46, was arrested and sentenced in 2005 after 3kg of cocaine was found at a house in Merseyside he had rented on behalf of an acquaintance. (ANI)

New study may offer treatment for anxiety disorders, depression

Washington, May 13 (ANI): A new study from the University of Michigan has shed light on why some individuals may be predisposed to anxiety.

The research team has identified a brain chemical called fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) that plays an important role in brain development, and in anxiety.

Lead researcher Dr Javier Perez suggests that the new discovery can offer potential new treatment for anxiety disorders and depression.

In the study, researchers examined FGF2 levels in rats selectively bred for high or low anxiety for over 19 generations.

The researchers found lower FGF2 levels in rats bred for high anxiety compared to those bred for low anxiety.

The study also suggests that environmental enrichment reduces anxiety by altering FGF2.

Perez and colleagues found that giving the high-anxiety rats a series of new toys reduced anxiety behaviors and increased their levels of FGF2.

Furthermore, they found that FGF2 treatment alone reduced anxiety behaviours in the high-anxiety rats.

“We have discovered that FGF2 has two important new roles: it’s a genetic vulnerability factor for anxiety and a mediator for how the environment affects different individuals,” said Perez.

“This is surprising, as FGF2 and related molecules are known primarily for organizing the brain during development and repairing it after injury,” he added.

The findings suggest that part of FGF2′s role in reducing anxiety may be due to its ability to increase the survival of new cells in a brain region called the hippocampus.

Previous research has suggested that depression decreases the production and incorporation of new brain cells, a process called neurogenesis.

Although the researchers found that high-anxiety rats produced the same number of new brain cells as low-anxiety rats, they found decreased survival of new brain cells in high-anxiety rats compared to low-anxiety rats.

However, FGF2 treatment and environmental enrichment each restored brain cell survival.

“This discovery may pave the way for new, more specific treatments for anxiety that will not be based on sedation – like currently prescribed drugs – but will instead fight the real cause of the disease,” said Dr Pier Vincenzo Piazza, Director of the Neurocentre Magendie an INSERM/University of Bordeaux institution in France, an expert on the role of neurogenesis in addiction and anxiety who was not involved in the current study.

The study appears in The Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

Footballers ‘are seedier than criminals’

Melbourne, May 9 (ANI): Football stars are more likely to have alcohol problems, be more verbally aggressive and more sexually promiscuous than criminals, a new study has shown.

The study, which was published in the Australian Psychological Society’s journal InPsych, based its findings on responses of 50 AFL footballers.

In the research, volunteers were subjected to personality tests and their results were compared to the results of similar tests conducted on 940 convicted criminals, The Courier Mail reports.

According to News.com.au, the study found footballers scored significantly higher than both the social average and the offenders in measures of alcohol problems, anxiety, verbal aggression, sexual promiscuity and anti-social behaviour.

“The data suggested that AFL footballers were most likely to offend in the context of alcohol usage, through offences such as drunk and disorderly, drink driving, or violent or reckless behaviour,” the study authors reported.

“The relatively high sexual promiscuity scores suggested AFL footballers may potentially place themselves at greater risk for sex-related offences and vulnerability to scandal,” it added.

Professor Bob Montgomery, president of the Australia Psychological Society, said: “Very often to become a high profile person, you’re a risk taker. You’re willing to take a chance that other people might turn their back on.”

He said the group mentality of young men in football teams was also part of the problem. (ANI)

Slack security makes Mumbai suspects housing jail soft target for terror strikes

Rawalpindi, May 7 (ANI): Inadequate security arrangements in and around the Adiala jail, where certain high profile under trials, including the Mumbai terror attack suspects have been kept, has increased its vulnerability to terror attacks, The Daily Times reports.

Police officials have admitted that the jail is a soft target for the extremists due to lack of proper security.

The officials said they had recommended some immediate steps to be taken to increase the safety level of the jail, where over 5,700 prisoners are locked currently, to higher authorities including the Inspector General of Police (IGP), Punjab, but are still waiting for a reply.

The recommendations included the hiring of ‘highly professional’ security experts, establishment of a well-equipped special cell to monitor jail’s security and installation of more CCTVs inside the prison premises, especially in the barracks of high-profile prisoners, officials said.

Currently there are only 370 security personnel manning the jail’s security. It has no security monitoring cell and the CCTV’s installed inside the prison campus too were insufficient to keep an eye on every corner of the jail.

The officials had also recommended that Elite Force’s personnel should be deployed out side the prison campus. (ANI)

Genetic make-up may influence one’s economic decisions

Washington, May 6 (ANI): It’s the genetic make-up of a person that determines how he or she would take economic decisions on the basis of whether the options have been framed negatively or positively, according to a study from University College London (UCL).

Decision-making is a complex process, particularly when we are uncertain about outcomes, which in turn depends on whether the options are phrased positively or negatively, known as the “framing effect”.

In earlier research, it was found that the amygdala, an area of the brain known to be involved in processing emotions, becomes active during decisions influenced by the framing effect.

And, in the new study, the researchers have shown that a person’s susceptibility to the framing effect – and the response of their amygdala – could be at least partially influenced by their genetic make-up.

“We know that people from across a variety of cultures are susceptible to biases when making decisions, and that even with training these biases are hard to overcome. This implies that hard-wired genetic influences might play an important role in determining how susceptible different individuals are to the framing effect,” said Dr Jonathan Roiser from the UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience.

They showed that decision-making is affected by variation in the serotonin transporter gene, at a region known as the 5-HTTLPR, which has previously been reported to affect the response of the amygdala and is

The gene is involved in the recycling of serotonin, a neurotransmitter essential for communication between nerve cells.

The researchers analysed two common variants of this gene, known as the “short” and “long” versions and selected thirty healthy volunteers carrying a pair of either of the two variants.

Essentially, those participants with two copies of the short variant were found to be more susceptible to the framing effect.

“This doesn’t mean that people with the short variants are risk takers. In fact, they were risk averse in the ‘gain frame’ whilst risk seeking in the ‘loss frame’, which implies inconsistency in their decision-making,” explained Roiser.

On taking brain images, it was found that participants with two copies of the short genetic variant had greater amygdala responses than their counterparts when making decisions influenced by the frame effect.

They also measured the degree of interaction, or connectivity, between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex, the brain region most implicated in human intelligence, personality and decision-making

And it was found that while resisting the frame effect, the participants with two copies of the long variant had stronger connectivity between the prefrontal cortex and amygdala, while those with a pair of short variants did not.

“This difference in connectivity is really interesting. It suggests that the volunteers carrying the long variant might regulate automatic emotional responses, which are driven by the amygdala, more efficiently, lessening their vulnerability to the framing effect,” said Roiser.

The study has been published in the Journal of Neuroscience. (ANI)

US concerned over vulnerability of Pak nukes

Washington, May 4 (ANI): The United States is increasingly concerned about new vulnerabilities for Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal, including the potential for militants to snatch a weapon in transport or to insert sympathizers into laboratories or fuel-production facilities in the aftermath of advance of the Taliban and al Qaeda figters within 60 km of Islamabad.

American officials emphasized that there was no reason to believe that the arsenal, most of which is south of the capital, Islamabad, faced an imminent threat, The New York Times reports.

President Barack Obama said last week that he remained confident that keeping the country’s nuclear infrastructure secure was the top priority of Pakistan’s armed forces. But the US does not know where all of Pakistani nuclear sites are located, and its concerns have intensified since the Taliban entered Buner.

The spread of the insurgency has left American officials less willing to accept blanket assurances from Pakistan that the weapons are safe.

Pakistani officials have continued to deflect US requests for more details about the location and security of the country’s nuclear sites, American officials said.

Some of the Pakistani reluctance, they said, stemmed from longstanding concern that the United States might be tempted to seize or destroy Pakistan’s arsenal if the insurgency appeared about to engulf areas near Pakistan’s nuclear sites.

But they said the most senior American and Pakistani officials had not yet engaged on the issue, a process that may begin this week, with President Asif Ali Zardari scheduled to visit Obama in Washington on Wednesday.

“We are largely relying on assurances, the same assurances we have been hearing for years,” said one senior official who was involved in the dialogue with Pakistan during the Bush years, and remains involved today. “The worse things get, the more strongly they hew to the line, ‘Don’t worry, we’ve got it under control.’ “

In public, the administration has only hinted at those concerns, repeating the formulation that the Bush Administration used: that it has faith in the Pakistani Army, the NYT reports.

Zardari heads the country’s National Command Authority, the mix of political, military and intelligence leaders responsible for its arsenal of 60 to 100 nuclear weapons. But in reality, his command and control over the weapons are considered tenuous at best; that power lies primarily in the hands of Army Chief General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani. (ANI)

India-Pakistan ties vulnerable to Mumbai type attacks: US analysts

Washington, April 14 (IANS) Indian and Pakistani governments’ means of detecting, preventing and responding to Mumbai type incidents needs to be strengthened to reduce the vulnerability of their relations to them, two US analysts have suggested.

The Nov 26-29 terror attacks blamed on Pakistan based terror outfit Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT) ushered in a period of high tension between India and Pakistan, noted Teresita C. Schaffer and Sabala Baskar.

Schaffer is director of the South Asia Programme at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington think tank, while Baskar is a research intern there.

Mumbai attacks also sparked the beginnings of an effort to reform India’s internal security response, and may have opened a door to expanded cooperation between the US and India against terrorism.

But, more importantly, the attacks underscored how vulnerable India-Pakistan relations are to incidents of this sort, especially when governments are weak or elections loom, Schaffer and Baskar said.

‘After the Mumbai attacks, caution prevailed during India’s internal deliberations. However, analysts were convinced that another attack of this sort might push India’s political leaders to a more forceful’ and potentially more dangerous ‘response’, the duo said.

‘This possibility reflects the need for a democratic government, especially one facing elections, to show that it can defend its country,’ they said, suggesting ‘the argument that a stable Pakistan serves India’s interest has little political resonance within the country’.

While details of the forensic cooperation between India and the US have not been released, it is clear that US officials were impressed and sobered by what they found, and that the US conveyed this clearly to Pakistan.

This appears to have been a factor in facilitating a relatively constructive Pakistani response.

The 2008 Mumbai episode contrasts with several previous terrorist incidents in which US-India cooperation was clearly hamstrung by US inability to straightforwardly deal with the problem of actual or potential Pakistani involvement.

This may open the door to stronger anti-terrorism cooperation between Delhi and Washington, an important potential addition to the relationship the two countries have been developing, the two researchers said.

But the Mumbai attacks also demonstrated how quickly a seemingly stable India-Pakistan environment can deteriorate.

‘Besides the familiar arguments for political leadership and persistent diplomacy between India and Pakistan, one factor in reducing this vulnerability is strengthening both governments’ means of detecting, preventing, and responding to such incidents,’ Schaffer and Baskar suggested.