Archive for the ‘Science’ Category

More fire information

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

From Scripps Institution of Oceanography:

SCCOOS has put together a collection of real-time data to support firefighting efforts in the 2007 Southern California wildfires, including meteorological station data, wind models, and satellite imagery.

We’ve also linked to the hpwren camera image site from our page.

You can find this data at:

http://www.sccoos.org/projects/fires2007

We appreciate your help in getting the word out to the community.

Ties together the previously-posted MODIS data plus weather and satellite visuals. Nice.

More fire satellite images

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

From NASA, of course. This first one is from the QuikScat satellite, 7AM 10/22. Wind speed via reflected radar on the water surface. Click for source page.

Vector field

The next one is visual, from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument on the Aqua satellite. 250m/pixel, 10/2. Again, click for source.

Visual, click for original

Found via Science in the News, wonderful stuff. Quite the plume, eh? I also like how the vector field shows the offshore winds that fanned the flames. Very cool.

Additional coolness: KMZ file of the MODIS for Google Earth!

This’ll get blogged everywhere

Friday, October 12th, 2007

Via a couple of different sources, a fascinating essay by Steven Pinker on cursing. Read the whole thing, but I can reveal to you that ‘the amygdala is the reason’.

The strange emotional power of swearing–as well as the presence of linguistic taboos in all cultures– suggests that taboo words tap into deep and ancient parts of the brain. In general, words have not just a denotation but a connotation: an emotional coloring distinct from what the word literally refers to, as in principled versus stubborn and slender versus scrawny.

Curses provoke a different response than their synonyms in part because connotations and denotations are stored in different parts of the brain.

The mammalian brain contains, among other things, the limbic system, an ancient network that regulates motivation and emotion, and the neocortex, the crinkled surface of the brain that ballooned in human evolution and which is the seat of perception, knowledge, reason, and planning. The two systems are interconnected and work together, but it seems likely that words’ denotations are concentrated in the neocortex, especially in the left hemisphere, whereas their connotations are spread across connections between the neocortex and the limbic system, especially in the right hemisphere.

Well worth a read, fascinating both for science and society backgrounds.

The physics of the longbow, and why Agincourt was a rout

Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007

An absolutely fascinating article on the physics of the longbow, with focus on the battle of Agincourt in 1415. Did you know that the pull on these bows ranged from 110 to 180 pounds? Or that the 6000 English archers were able to drop 800 arrows per second onto the French?

Yowza.

There’s also a second article in New Scientist, with a slightly different focus. Both are fascinating.

As an aside, did you know that the Pope banned crossbows in 1139?

By 1300, the crossbow had largely displaced the longbow on European battlefields, despite being banned in 1139 by the Pope as ‘deathly and hateful to God and unfit to be used by Christians’.

I don’t seem to recall any recent similar prohibitions against, say, MOABs.

Scream away, you’ll live longer.

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Via Science in the news, the dual research finding that

  1. Women who keep silent during disputes die sooner
  2. There’s no difference for men.

And who knew there was an actual ‘Journal of Psychosomatic Medicine’? Damn!

So yell away at him; you’re doing it for your health. How can he argue with that?

To conclude, my best effort at finding a fishwife image, courtesy of Google image search:

Fishwife, click for source page

(’Fishwife’ by Leon Underwood, Linocut, 1938)

Almost forgot - hostile couples heal slower, too. Mind and body, indeed.

Read and be amused.

And you thought that flying coach was tough

Monday, September 17th, 2007

One bad mofo, this bird!


Via Science in the News:

A female shorebird was recently found to have flown 7,145 miles (11,500
kilometers) nonstop from Alaska to New Zealand - without taking a break for
food or drink. It’s the longest nonstop bird migration ever measured,
according to biologists who tracked the flight using satellite tags.

The bird, a wader called a bar-tailed godwit, completed the journey in nine
days. In addition to demonstrating the bird’s surprising endurance, the
trek confirms that godwits make the southbound trip of their annual
migration directly across the vast Pacific rather than along the East Asian
coast, scientists said.

Nine days of non-stop flight. Longest ever measured.

Whoa. Full article here.

The Decline and Fall of the Rovian Empire

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007



Sorry, couldn’t resist the combination of Rove-departing news and classic Edward Gibbon. This is neither. And it has a little to do with Rove.

The US government is on a ‘burning platform’ of unsustainable policies and practices with fiscal deficits, chronic healthcare underfunding, immigration and overseas military commitments threatening a crisis if action is not taken soon, the country’s top government inspector has warned.

Who’s the author, you ask? One of the usual suspects? Nope.

David Walker, comptroller general of the US, issued the unusually downbeat assessment of his country’s future in a report that lays out what he called “chilling long-term simulations”.

These include “dramatic” tax rises, slashed government services and the large-scale dumping by foreign governments of holdings of US debt.

Drawing parallels with the end of the Roman empire, Mr Walker warned there were “striking similarities” between America’s current situation and the factors that brought down Rome, including “declining moral values and political civility at home, an over-confident and over-extended military in foreign lands and fiscal irresponsibility by the central government”.

Needless to say, it’s a bit unusual for the head of the GAO to compare the USA to the Roman Empire. On his own volition, too:

While most of its studies are commissioned by legislators, about 10 per cent – such as the one containing his latest warnings – are initiated by the comptroller general himself.

Well. Read the article here. (Financial Times, free)

Walk a mile in *these* shoes.

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

The perfect picture, stolen from Flickr

(Picture from this Flickr page.)

So what’s life like if you’re stuck on the low side of the bell curve?

According to Wray Herbert and this post, it’s different:

As reported in the July issue of the journal Psychological Science, the dull-witted report drifiting not when they are bored, but rather when their minds are overtaxed by some unusually challenging task. It’s like they don’t have the mental resources to stay on task, so they stop striving. Their minds are escaping more than wandering.

Read it. It’s fascinating. The blog is chock full or more tidbits too, so check it out.

Interesting paper… one cause of obesity found?

Thursday, July 19th, 2007


Bisphenol A, pic from wikipedia

Via this Salon article, news of paper on PLoS by Lisa Gross with the imposing title of “The Toxic Origins of Disease.”

(Sidebar:

What if scientific and medical literature were considered a public resource, available to use any way you chose at no cost; all you would have to do is give credit to the author and source as described in the Creative Commons Attribution License?

That’s from this page, which phrases it better than I can. PLoS, the Public Library of Science, solves many of the super-expensive-journal problems I had in school and the ability to google-read-cite is magnificent. I’m a big fan.)

Anyway. The paper hypothesizes that Bisphenol A, a very common polymer used to make polycarbonates and epoxy resins, causes obesity. There’s a lot of it around, and it is known to act like an estrogen receptor agonist. That’s bad:

Recent studies have confirmed that bisphenol A exposure during development has carcinogenic effects and produce precursors of breast cancer.[6] Bisphenol A has been shown to have developmental toxicity, carcinogenic effects, and possible neurotoxicity.

That’s from Wikipedia’s entry on the chemical, which is fairly conservative. OK, so we know its bad news, and maybe you should lose the Nalgene bottle for something in stainless steel. (For their part, Nalgene has their position here.) I don’t think it passed, but California was going to ban B-A from kid’s products. (Update: it died in committee.)

The Gross paper is fascinating. As you’d probably expect, the companies involved have a bit of an agenda:

By the end of 2004, they had identified 115 published studies on low doses of bisphenol A. They also found a troubling trend. Ninety percent of government studies found significant effects of bisphenol A at doses below the EPA’s lowest adverse effect level, but not a single industry study found any effect. Many of the industry studies, they pointed out, either used a rat strain with very low sensitivity to estrogen or misinterpreted failure to find effects with positive controls. Vom Saal and Hughes urged the EPA to conduct a new risk assessment on bisphenol A.

The news gets even worse:

Soto exposed pregnant rodents to “minuscule doses of bisphenol A, the same doses that humans are exposed to, according to the CDC.” In rats, this treatment produced overweight female offspring; in mice, adding the estrogenic chemical produced female offspring that behaved like males. Both rats and mice also had altered ovarian cycles. In a second round of experiments in mice, in utero bisphenol A exposures induced changes in mammary gland development that began in fetal life and persisted.

The changes in the breast and genital tract were expected, Soto says, but some of the behavioral effects and obesity came as a complete surprise. “We were looking at an estrogen thinking it was going to affect the reproductive system and mammary gland only, but then these two other things emerged without us ever imagining that.”

Bisphenol A might induce epigenetic changes by altering patterns of DNA methylation, a chemical modification that controls gene expression, or by activating or silencing genes at the moment of exposure during a critical period of development. Soto is pursuing these possibilities. “A single exposure during a point of vulnerability may suffice,” Soto says. “You know the thalidomide story. You can have thalidomide every day of your life and you will be fine. But [take it] at certain times during pregnancy, your child will end up with no arms.”

OK, that last bit is rather alarmist in tone. The link to obesity, however, seems to be more solid:

In the thrifty phenotype hypothesis, undernutrition in the womb programs metabolic systems to expect a postnatal world of undernutrition. From an evolutionary perspective, genes that promote insulin resistance (thereby limiting glucose uptake) and fat storage would prove advantageous in times of famine. But in a world of fast foods, empty calories, and supersized meals, the same genes would promote obesity, insulin resistance, and type 2 diabetes. Interestingly, a class of drugs used to treat type 2 diabetes (called thiazolidinediones) activates PPAR to reverse insulin resistance in muscle and liver, but in doing so increases fat mass by facilitating triglyceride uptake in adipocytes.

When vom Saal generates growth-restricted mouse pups by exposing mothers to bisphenol A, the babies go through a “ballistic postnatal growth period.” A second group of mice starts out “really heavy” and stays that way. Vom Saal’s two types of obese mice have 430 genes with different activity in their fat cells, exhibit substantial differences in glucose tolerance and leptin levels (leptin regulates appetite and energy expenditure), and lose weight at different rates.

Though understanding the underlying causes of these differences will take “multiple lifetimes of work,” vom Saal says, it’s clear that both animals end up heavy in entirely different ways, with entirely different physiological, fat metabolism, and regulatory systems. “We think that environmental chemicals like bisphenol A are likely to target subpopulations of individuals that are rendered very sensitive to these chemicals by virtue of their genes, genetic background, maternal–fetal interactions . . . and the amount of hormones they’re exposed to.”

I had previously posted about sugar, and it’s probably also true that we have a lot more obese people now that we used to. The idea that, as Leonard put it, “Does plastic make us fat?” was an important question.

One of the Gross papers’ points that struck me was that

What’s more, production of these chemicals closely tracks the rise of obesity.

Along with the explosions in autism and asthma, the sudden change in the morphology of Americans since the 70s demands answers. Why did we start to get fat (and ill) all of a sudden? What changed? The sugar/corn syrup change is probably part of it, but the correlation with bisphenol-A production is also a possibility. Correlation is not causation, of course, but I rather hope that we can overcome the vested interests and figure out what the hell happened. Papers like this are an excellent start.


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Cleanliness is far away from MRSA

Monday, June 4th, 2007
However, the results of a double-blinded, randomized clinical trial comparing the short- and long-term effects of hand washing with plain or antimicrobial soap over the course of a year argue in favor of targeted rather than ubiquitous general household use of antimicrobial soap.

Long article on the best way to stay healthy. Unsurprisingly, it’s simply washing your hands, and skip the anti-microbial soap. Yer mom was right.