Author: Serkadis

  • blood pressure question

    okay, at diagnosis my BP was normal.

    then 3 months later it was high, averaging 145/95. I was put on 10 of quinipril.

    3 months later I started falling down when I stood up.

    went to doctor BP was low and dropping to 90/60 upon standing.

    dr cut the quinipril in half.

    presently, another 3 months later. my BP is around 130/over 85
    thats too high, I monitor it myslef now and its usually around this range.

    what does this mean and what should I do? do I have to go back to the docotr.

    my resting pulse is usually between 80-90. is that okay. fluctuates quite a bit.

  • God of War III: Ultimate Trilogy Edition announced for PAL territories

    How do you make God of War III’s Ultimate Edition even more ultimate? By throwing in God of War Collection and turning

  • ANDERSON’s NOTEBOOK: What is US Industry to Make of Copenhagen?

    Fred Anderson is providing an inside look at COP-15 in Copenhagen to The Bureau of National Affairs (BNA) World Climate Change Report. 

    Today, Anderson’s Notebook (12/17/09), titled What is US Industry to Make of Copenhagen?, discusses what industry is to make of the proceedings and whether the conference and any agreement it produces will shape things to come in the United States.

    To read the full entry, please click here.

  • VIDEO: How not to behave during a traffic stop

    Filed under: , ,

    The roadside siren — Click above to watch video

    The prospect of getting a ticket can make you do a lot of things you wouldn’t normally do — beg, plead, be charming, anything goes, really, when it comes to fending off points and higher insurance premiums. Well, not anything, unless you’re this woman, who went nuts at the idea of being ticketed. Like, crazy nuts.

    We don’t know who she is or what she did or what ungodly nightmare she was trying to avoid, but we do know she’s got a set of pipes. If anyone can tell us what she’s saying, please let us know in the comments. Follow the jump for the video, and keep your hand on the volume knob for this one.

    [Source: Live Leak via Ryan O’Keefe]

    Continue reading VIDEO: How not to behave during a traffic stop

    VIDEO: How not to behave during a traffic stop originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 14:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Sony Ebook Boss: DRM Needs To Stay And Ebooks Should Cost More Than $10

    PaidContent has the details on an interview with Steve Haber, the boss of Sony’s ebook reader business, where he trashed the $10 ebook and praised DRM. And now you all know why no one buys Sony ebook readers. Basically, the product’s boss has decided to take an anti-consumer stance. Why would anyone want to shell out hundreds of dollars on a product when you know the company that makes it wants to screw you over?

    On the price of ebooks — a topic of widespread debate — he insists that $10 can’t possibly work:


    “The $9.99 price point is not a money-maker. Certain bestsellers are sold at that price for retail, competitive reasons. But you need to have a range. You could go from $10 to $20 even to $100 for an e-book. There’s no sweet spot and it’s certainly not $9.99.”

    Well, first, let’s be clear. The only reason that $9.99 isn’t a money-maker is because publishers are still charging more at wholesale for the ebooks, still pretending that the lack of printing, materials and shipping shouldn’t result in a lower price. Basically, the publishers are in denial, and Sony shouldn’t be supporting them.

    How about DRM? Remember, this is Sony, we’re talking about, which has a history of abusing DRM against consumers. It’s also the same Sony who keeps having its top execs claim that DRM holds up innovation and that open solutions win in competitive markets. And then they release their next DRM’ed/closed offering. So, how does Haber explain his love of DRM?


    “You need an orderly process to sell books and DRM makes that possible, mainly because it allows content creators and distributors to make money from that content.”

    Huh?!? What does DRM have to do with making money from content? Absolutely nothing. iTunes sells a lot of music — and it’s all DRM free (finally). You don’t need DRM to make money from content. You don’t need DRM to have an “orderly process” to sell things. You only need DRM to limit what consumers can do, limiting the value of the content, making it less valuable to pay for.

    It seems that the only thing keeping Sony in this business is the fact that the competition is basically just as bad on these issues, but one of these days someone’s going to figure this out — but it doesn’t sound like it will be Sony.

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  • Detroit 2010 Preview: Volvo C30 EV evolves for road trials

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    Volvo C30 BEV prototype – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Volvo has built versions of its C30 hatchback with efficient diesel engines, plug-in hybrid powerplants, flex-fuel ICEs, and pure electric drivetrains. It’s the all-electric version that will get some extra attention at the Detroit Auto Show next month with Volvo’s announcement today that it will build at least 50 units of the BEV C30. The cars will be made next year and are due to start real-world tests in 2011.

    Volvo brought a drivable prototype version of the C30 BEV to the Frankfurt Motor Show earlier this year, but the machine that will be shown in Detroit is a more evolved iteration. Volvo says that the NAIAS unit has a complete interior, full instrumentation, and enhanced battery packaging.

    Lennart Stegland, director of Volvo Cars Special Vehicles, said in a statement, “The first prototype helped us identify the main technological challenges, such as battery packaging and safety issues. We have addressed these challenges without compromising the C30’s cool and fun-to-drive personality. I am very happy with the result. The electric C30 in Detroit is a much more complete product.” Want to know more? Check out the high-res gallery below and the official press release after the jump.

    [Source: Volvo]

    Continue reading Detroit 2010 Preview: Volvo C30 EV evolves for road trials

    Detroit 2010 Preview: Volvo C30 EV evolves for road trials originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 14:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Get It While It’s Hot: Updating News from December Music Educators Journal

     

    Voting Opens Online January 1 for MENC National and Division Offices
    MENC is holding national and division elections, and active, retired and lifetime MENC members can vote online from January 1, 2010, to March 7, 2010.

    Members with e-mail addresses on file with MENC will also receive an e-mail with voting instructions. If you do not receive this e-mail, contact MENC at 703-860-4000 or 800-336-3768.

    MENC President-Elect candidates are Nancy Ditmer of Wooster, Ohio, and David Weatherred of Spokane, Washington. Biographies of candidates for 2010–2012 National President-Elect and North Central, Southern, and Western Division Presidents-Elect are online. So, if you looking for something to do on New Year’s Day, vote here.

    Licensing Resource for Educators
    Under U.S. Copyright law, recordings of student performances must be properly licensed. MENC has teamed with The Harry Fox Agency (HFA), Music Teachers National Association (MTNA), and the Music Publishers’ Association (MPA), to promote proper licensing practices by educators.

    Songfile® is an easy way for MENC members who plan to make and distribute 2,500 copies or fewer of their recordings to obtain the necessary mechanical licenses for cover versions of songs. Through Songfile, educators can obtain licenses for CDs and permanent digital downloads from HFA’s entire database of over 2.3 million songs in all genres. The Songfile Web site has more information.

    MENC Student Composers Talent Search Under Way
    MENC seeks exceptional student compositions to be performed during MENC’s Music Education Week in Washington, June 24–29, 2010.The instrumental composition category is for woodwinds, solo or any combination of instruments up to a woodwind quintet and piano. Selected compositions will be the best representative works from MENC’s six regional divisions for students in K–12 and undergraduate and graduate school.

    Download the entry form at MENC Contests. The entry deadline is February 15, 2010. For more information contact MENC at 800-336-3768, or e-mail Nicole Springer

    Students Can Enter NSBA Electronic Composition Contest
    Sponsored by MENC and the National School Boards Association (NSBA), the Electronic Music Composition Competition recognizes outstanding student compositions. It is held to help influence school administrators to include or upgrade music technology in their schools.

    Winning students and their schools will receive prizes and will be honored at the NSBA’s 2010 T+L Conference. The deadline is April 14, 2010

    Plan to Attend MENC Conferences in 2010
    Visit the MENC Web site  for news on MENC’s two major events for 2010.

    MENC’s 2010 Biennial Conference, with a special focus on research in music education and music teacher education will be March 25–27 in Anaheim, California, at the Hilton Anaheim.

    Music Education Week in Washington is June 24-29. The 2010 academies are:

    •  Choral
    •  Collegiate MENC Leadership
    •  Drum Corps International Marching Music
    •  General Music Technology
    •  “IN-ovations” (teaching techniques and opportunities for teachers of non-traditional curricula)
    •  Instrumental
    •  Society for Jazz Education
    • Young Teachers

     

    Here are some noteworthy Music In Our Schools Month®  deadlines to keep in mind:

    • Music In Our Schools Month® (MIOSM®)—2010 MIOSM Lesson Plan Writing Contest for music educators. The deadline is February 1, 2010.
    • The Green Anthem Lyric-Writing Contest, for students in grades 7–12.The deadline is February 15, 2010. Visit the MENC Web site or more information on either contest.
       

    New Book Explores Past and Future of Music Education
    Music Education at a Crossroads: Realizing the Goal of Music for All is a new book that compiles addresses given at the MENC Centennial Congress in 2007. Janet Barrett edited the Congress addresses, which consider the past and future of music education. Barrett is associate professor of music education at the Bienen School of Music, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois.

    The Centennial Congress declared, “It is the right of every child to receive a balanced, comprehensive, sequential music education taught by qualified music teachers,” and the addresses consider how to make that happen.

    For more information on the book, visit the Rowman & LIttlefield Education Web site. The list price for the cloth version is $50; $21.95 for paper. MENC members receive a 25% discount with the code MENC25.

    MENC Academic Journals Seek New Leadership
    MENC journals have several positions opening up beginning July 1, 2010.
    For MENC’s academic online publications:
    UPDATE: Applications of Research in Music Education seeks nominations for vacancies on the Editorial Committee: Choral Researcher, Elementary Researcher, Instrumental Practitioner, and General Music Practitioner.  Deadline: February 18, 2010.
    General Music Today seeks applications for a new editor and two new members of the Editorial Board. Duties will begin on July 1, 2010, and continue through June 30, 2016. Deadline: March 1, 2010.
    Journal of Music Teacher Education seeks nominations for a new editor (Deadline: March 1, 2010) and two new members of the editorial board (Deadline: January 15, 2010). Duties begin on July 1, 2010, and August 1, 2010, respectively.
    Music Educators Journal seeks a new Academic Editor, nine new editorial board members, and twenty new members of its advisory board. The positions have various durations. Deadline: January 31, 2010.
    For more information on any of these positions, visit  MENC Journals under the specific journal name.

    Princess and Frog Offer Jazzy Lessons for Students
    The new Disney animated film The Princess and the Frog opened to great reviews. MENC worked with Disney, Scholastic, and Jazz at Lincoln Center to create jazz education lessons for the new feature, which is set in New Orleans.

    Aimed at students in grades 4–6, lesson plans and other materials will explore the roots of New Orleans jazz music. Students also can learn the fundamentals of jazz techniques through hands-on activities and listening exercises. Download the lesson plans and other printable files,  and watch the Princess movie trailer.

    Roz Fehr, December 17, 2009. © MENC: The National Association for Music Education

  • Dementium II scaring Europe in March

    Games full of horror, blood, and guts may not be synonymous with the DS, but more of that is coming to the Nintendo handheld next year thanks to SouthPeak Games, who’ve recently slapped a European release date

  • All my complications have gone away

    I have been reading a lot of threads about complications and decided to start my own to let others know what got rid of all my complications.

    I am 45 years old and have had type1 for 20 yrs now. The best A1c test I have ever had was 7.2 but usually are from 7.9-8.9. Not well controlled. My complications started about 7 years ago with neurogenic bladder which is neuropathy of the bladder although was not diagnosed until3-4 years ago about the same time I developed trigger finger in both thumbs, tingling and numbness in my toes on right foot, high eye pressure which was diagnosed as glaucoma. I was being treated by specialists for all these conditions.

    A friend told me about a product ( Immunocal) that raises glutathione in your cells thus optimizing the immune system and I agreed to try it since I was also always getting sick with whatever bug was going around. Happy to say that I immediately noticed I had more energy, felt better and after 6-7 months on product noticed that I hadnt been sick.

    I kept taking 1 pack a day for about 1 1/2 years and during this time developed allergies for the first time in my life. My friend said that his allergies went away along with his asthma when he started it so I decided to try 6 packs a day for a month just to see what would happen. When I did this all my complications disappeared. It took me a couple days to figure out that it was the Immunocal and a couple months to verify my results with all my doctors. Since then I have heard of many diabetics having the same results with Immunocal as well as many people with other major illnesses and diseases having amazing results. I became an Immunotec Independant Consultant for 2 reasons. I take 4 packs a day to keep my complications gone and it was getting pricey for me, about $300 a month so by becoming a consultant I pay for my own product and then some and the second reason is that I now thoroughly enjoy telling others about it.

    This product has over 30 human clinical trials and more in the works for many other conditions and I hope that one day diabetes will be among them because it works and I am living proof.

    There is a money back guarantee that is a no brainer. Try it for 30 days and if you are not satisfied get a full refund of purchase price. We are not allowed to post personal contact info but you can go to Buy Products for more info and science behind product.
    I hope someone else will benefit from this

  • VIDEO: Valet vigilante vandalism visualizes very vunerable vehicles

    Filed under: ,

    Valets burning all kinds of rubber — Click above to watch video

    We suppose we should thank some of the less savvy lunkheads out there for their egos – if they didn’t post videos of their antics, they might not be caught. A few valets in the employ of Atlanta-based AAA Valet, working at the St. Louis Hyatt hotel, used patrons cars for serious burnout sessions in an underground garage. Nothing was spared – Civics, SUVs, Porsches, Acuras; it appears that if it could be driven, they would find a way to eat up its tires.

    The clincher: the digital displays of drifting doom ended up on YouTube under the profile of “Valet Underground”. Someone blew the whistle, and now AAA valet doesn’t service the Hyatt hotel anymore. Not surprisingly, the videos are gone – we just hope their licenses have met the same fate. Follow the jump to check out the action. Hat tip to Luke!

    [Source: Fox2 Now]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Valet vigilante vandalism visualizes very vunerable vehicles

    VIDEO: Valet vigilante vandalism visualizes very vunerable vehicles originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 13:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Shouldn’t The Labels Be Paying YouTube For All The ‘Free’ Service They Provide?

    I recently wrote about Simon Cowell’s conflicting statements expressing anger that YouTube didn’t pay him for showing the Susan Boyle video millions of times, while then being happy that the same video will result in 10 million album sales. In my latest column for The Telegraph, I explore how the legacy music industry made a huge mistake in attacking YouTube and having videos pulled down off the site for not getting “paid” enough, when just a few years ago if they had wanted to put up music videos of their bands, they would have paid an arm and a leg for software, hosting and bandwidth — and the consumer experience would have been a hell of a lot worse (RealNetworks media player, anyone?).

    In thinking more about this, I was realizing how hypocritical the recording industry is on this particular topic. After all, they go on and on about how bad “free” is, and how they must get paid for any use of their content or they can’t survive. And, yet, when someone gives them something for free (and YouTube provides free software, free bandwidth, free community and a bunch of other benefits), they complain that they’re not getting paid. It’s an incredible double standard. If the recording industry were actually being intellectually honest (I know, I know…), wouldn’t they be demanding to pay Google for providing such a service, since (as they claim) you “can’t make money from free”?

    Separately, I had wanted to mention this in the Telegraph column, but ran out of room. It is worth noting that at least some of the industry has, in some ways, “embraced” YouTube with the launch of Vevo a couple weeks ago (though, that launch was completely bungled by apparently not expecting anyone to actually visit the site). I still haven’t quite figured out what Vevo is, however. It’s a joint venture of Google and Universal Music, with EMI and Sony Music as partners (Warner remains the major label holdout). As far as I can tell, though, it just seeks to be a separate platform to give the labels some more “control” over videos on YouTube. I still can’t figure out why this needs to be a separate company, other than to play financial games. Isn’t this just a feature of YouTube?

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  • Dazzboard – new easy to use media transfer interface for smartphones

    184904-dazzboard2_new_original

    Many of us use drag and drop to manage our media on our smartphones.  Dazzboard aims to go one better, by providing a browser-based user interface for your drag and drop media.

    Dazzboard runs on your browser and works with any device which supports USB Mass Storage mode. Once you’re set up, you’ll be able to view and manage all of your phone’s content on the Dazzboard homepage. You can also transfer files from your PC to your phone, including your entire iTunes library.

    Dazzboard also lets you download content to your phone from your other social networking sites like Facebook, Flickr and YouTube with the "Dazz me!" bookmarklet.

    Dazzboard also has an interesting user discovery aspect: Videos, music and photos from other sources appear on the site. You can then grab this content, place it in a transfer queue (which appears on your Dazzboard page) and then transfer it to your phone. This include media such as Youtube videos.

    Without an easy to use media source such as iTunes an application such as Dazzboard makes a lot of sense, and makes a break from many other synchronization products that try to do too much.

    Read more at Dazzboard here.

    Via PCWorld.com

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  • Obama Plunges In Polls Thanks To Wall Street Bailouts And Ballooning Deficits

    Aaron Task: What a difference a year makes. The stock market has come a long way in the past 12 months and so have President Obama’s approval ratings, but in the opposite direction.

    The latest WSJ/NBC News poll shows Obama’s approval ratings have slipped below 50% for the first time in his presidency and have suffered the steepest first-year decline in modern American history.

    There’s good reason Obama’s poll numbers have fallen, most notably his mishandling of the banks, as Henry and I discuss here and in the accompanying clip. Obama may talk tough about “fat-cat bankers” but the actions of his administration suggest policy is still being conducted at their behest.

    Beyond “bailout fatigue”, Americans are upset with Obama about the ongoing spending spree in Washington. On Thursday, the Democrat-controlled House passed a $290 billion increase to the government’s debt ceiling as well as a $154 billion package aimed at boosting jobs and aiding state governments.

    In his Dec. 8 speech at the Brookings Institute, Obama declared: “Even as we have had to spend our way out of this recession in the near term, we have begun to make the hard choices necessary to get our country on a more stable fiscal footing in the long term.”

    But again, actions speak louder than words, and it’s clear to most Americans we are still in the “spending our way out of the recession” phase. That might be the “right” thing to do with unemployment and foreclosures at startling levels, but many taxpayers understandably worry about what happens when the bill come due for all this spending.

    Meanwhile, Obama has disappointed his liberal base on a number of fronts, including the Afghan troop surge, the absence of a public option in health-care reform and lack of progress at the Copenhagen climate meeting.

    Given all that, it’s not surprising Obama’s ratings have fallen and just 35% of Americans feel positively about his party vs. 49% in February, according to the WSJ/NBC poll.

    With incumbents of all stripes feeling the heat, that bodes poorly for the majority party in the 2010 mid-term elections. About the only good news for President Obama is he’s not up for reelection until 2012 so he has time to right the administration’s ship, which needs a “change” of course.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Visions of Grandeur: Refreshed Hyundai Azera on the horizon?

    Filed under: , , ,

    KDM Hyundai Grandeur – click for high-res gallery

    The Hyundai Azera is a perfectly nice car in a background-supporting-role kind of way. While the slow-selling model might seem to be something of a moot point now that the Genesis sedan is on U.S. soil, a refreshed version of the sedan has just debuted in its home country – albeit under the Grandeur nameplate. It’s still unclear whether this version of the Grandeur will come to our market as an update for the Azera, but its mere existence signals that Hyundai believes that there’s a place for a offering above the swanky new YF Sonata.

    The new Grandeur is still conservatively styled and attractive. There’s some more angularity up front, a bolder grille and restyled headlamps, but the car is still not in danger of grabbing you by the eye lashes and making you pay attention. LED taillights and a reshaped bumper define the rear view, and a new package brings Alcantara seats to the interior.

    No word yet on any further refinements to the interior or any mechanical changes to the 3.3-liter V6 powertrain, but we’ll keep hunting for more information.

    In any case, being that the Grandeur/Azera is a front-wheel-drive car with more cylinders and more traditional styling than the new Sonata, Hyundai may yet be holding a spot for this vehicle in America – right in the narrow niche between Sonata and Genesis.

    Gallery: Hyundai Grandeur

    [Source: Hyundai]

    Visions of Grandeur: Refreshed Hyundai Azera on the horizon? originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Dec 2009 13:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Latest uTorrent 2.1 Alpha Comes with Streaming Video Support

    uTorrent, the most popular bittorrent client in the world now owned and developed by BitTorrent, is getting closer to the 2.0 release, which packs some pretty big features and updates. One feature is support for the new uTP protocol, the latest iteration of the BitTorrent protocol dating from 2001, which can adjust bandwidth consumption depending on network conditions. The new uTorrent 2.0 Release Candidate 1 also comes with very interesting features and support for video streaming. UPDATE: Video streaming was introduced in the latest 2.1 alpha release, not in the release candidate version.

    The official release notes for the RC list these updates:

    -We’ve added UDP tracker support!
    -uTP has been improved significantly over the previous alpha, with many bugs fixed and performance improvements. It’s no longer hidden in Advanced settings.
    -The setup dialog has been overhauled to make it much easier to use and with a built-in speed test. It’s still not quite complete yet, but this will give you a good taste of what we’re up to with it!
    -A new transfer cap feature has been added to track bandwidth usage, along with graphs to show your usage.

    Better things are still to come, though. As TorrentFreak notes that perhaps the most exciting new feature in the upcoming 2.1… (read more)

  • How To Hate The Dollar And Short The Gold Hype At The Same Time

    As Joe Weisenthal previously highlighted via Reuters, the Norwegian Krone is an interesting alternative to gold for those who wish to short the U.S. dollar. This is because Norway has a budget surplus, is rich with natural resources, a stable economy, etc.

    NOK

    Yet we’ll take it one step further.

    Sure the Krone has done well year to date against the dollar. Yet so has gold, and in fact gold has done far better than the Krone, as shown below (we used the gold EFT ‘GLD’ to represent gold). This shows how gold may have been overhyped and moved too far, even as a dollar-short position, since it outperformed even the rock-solid krone as well.

    Thus this spread between the performance, shown below, could represent gold’s hype, above and beyond its value as a hedge against the dollar.

    NOK

    Which means that a far more interesting krone trade, in our view, might be to long the krone yet short gold. You would simply be betting that the spread below closes, no matter where the dollar goes. Thus it’s dollar neutral (you don’t have to become dollar-bullish), yet allows you to act on a belief that gold has been over-hyped.

    This is just the beginning of an idea, everyone should of course due their own due diligence.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Michael Merzenich on Brain Training, Assessments, and Personal Brain Trainers

    Dr. Michael Merzenich Dr. Michael Merzenich, Emeritus Professor at UCSF, is a leading pioneer in brain plasticity research. In the late 1980s, Dr. Merzenich was on the team that invented the cochlear implant. In 1996, he was the founding CEO of Scientific Learning Corporation (Nasdaq: SCIL), and in 2004 became co-founder and Chief Scientific Officer of Posit Science. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1999 and to the Institute of Medicine this year. He retired as Francis A. Sooy Professor and Co-Director of the Keck Center for Integrative Neuroscience at the University of California at San Francisco in 2007. You may have learned about his work in one of PBS TV specials, multiple media appearances, or neuroplasticity-related books.

    (Alvaro Fernandez) Dear Michael, thank you very much for agreeing to participate in the inaugural SharpBrains Summit in January, and for your time today. sharpbrains_summit_logo_webIn order to contextualize the Summit’s main themes, I would like to focus this interview on the likely big-picture implications during the next 5 years of your work and that of other neuroplasticity research and industry pioneers.

    Thank you for inviting me. I believe the SharpBrains Summit will be very useful and stimulating, you are gathering an impressive group together. I am looking forward to January.

    Neuroplasticity-based Tools: The New Health & Wellness Frontier

    There are many different technology-free approaches to harnessing -enabling, driving- neuroplasticity. What is the unique value that technology brings to the cognitive health table?

    It’s all about efficiency, scalability, personalization, and assured effectiveness. Technology supports the implementation of near-optimally-efficient brain-training strategies. Through the Internet, it enables the low-cost distribution of these new tools, anywhere out in the world. Technology also enables the personalization of brain health training, by providing simple ways to measure and address individual needs in each person’s brain-health training experience. It enables assessments of your abilities that can affirm that your own brain health issues have been effectively addressed.

    Of course substantial gains could also be achieved by organizing your everyday activities that grow your neurological abilities and sustain your brain health. Still, if the ordinary citizen is to have any real chance of maintaining their brain fitness, they’re going to have to spend considerable time at the brain gym!

    One especially important contribution of technology is the scalability that it provides for delivering brain fitness help out into the world. Think about how efficient the drug delivery system is today. Doctors prescribe drugs, insurance covers them, and there is a drug store in every neighborhood in almost every city in the world so that every patient has access to them. Once neuroplasticity-based tools and outcomes and standardized, we can envision a similar scenario. And we don’t need all those drug strores, because we have the Internet!

    Having said this, there are obvious obstacles. One main one, in my mind, is the lack of understanding of what these new tools can do. Cognitive training programs, for example, seem counterintuitive to consumers and many professionals – why would one try to improve speed-of-processing if all one cares about is “memory”? A second obvious problem is to get individuals to buy into the effort required to really change their brains for the better. That buy-in has been achieved for many individuals as it applies to their physical health, but we haven’t gotten that far yet in educating the average older person that brain fitness training is an equally effortful business!

    Tools for Safer Driving: Teens and Adults

    Safe driving seems to be one area where the benefits are more intuitive, which may explain the significant traction.

    Yes, we see great potential and interest among insurers for improving driving safety, both for seniors and teens. Appropriate cognitive training can lower at-fault accident rates. You can measure clear benefits in relatively short time frames, so it won’t take long for insurers to see an economic rationale to not only offer programs at low cost or for free but to incentivize drivers to complete them. Allstate, AAA, State Farm and other insurers are beginning to realize this potential. It is important to note that typical accidents among teens and seniors are different, so that training methodologies will need to be different for different high-risk populations.

    Yet, most driving safety initiatives today still focus on educating drivers, rather that training them neurologically. We measure vision, for example, but completely ignore attentional control abilities, or a driver’s useful field of view. I expect this to change significantly over the next few years.

    Long-term care and health insurance companies will ultimately see similar benefits, and we believe that they will follow a similar course of action to reduce general medical and neurodegenerative disease- (Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer’s- and Parkinsons-) related costs. In fact, many senior living communities are among the pioneers in this field.

    Boomers & Beyond: Maintaining Cognitive Vitality

    Mainstream media is covering this emerging category with thousands of stories. But most coverage seems still focused on “does it work?” more than “how do we define It”, “what does work mean?” or “work for whom, and for what?” Can you summarize what recent research suggests?

    We have seen clear patterns in the application of our training programs, some published (like IMPACT), some unpublished, some with healthy adults, and some with people with mild cognitive impairment or early Alzheimers Disease (AD). What we see in every case: 1) despite one’s age, brain functioning can be improved, often with pretty impressive improvement in a short-time frame and limited time invested (10 or 20 or 30 or 40 hours over a period of a few weeks up to 2 or 3 months). 2) Basic neurological abilities in 60-90 year olds that are directly subject to training (for example, processing accuracy or processing speed) can be improved to the performance level of the average 20 or 30 or 40 year old through 3-10 hours of training at that specific ability. 3) Improvements generalize to broader cognitive measures, and to indices of quality of life. 4) Improvements are sustained over time (in different controlled studies, documented at all post-training benchmarks set between 3 to 72 months after training completion).

    In normal older individuals, training effects endure – but that does not mean that they could not benefit from booster or refresher training — or from ongoing training designed to improve other skills and abilities that limit their older lives. Importantly, a limited controlled study in mildly cognitively impaired individuals showed that in contrast to normal individuals, their abilities declined in the post-training epoch. These folks had improved substantially with training. Even while there abilities slowly deteriorated after training, they sustained their advantages over patients who were not trained. We believe that in these higher-risk individual, continued training will probably be absolutely necessary to sustain their brain health, and, if it can be achieved (and that is completely unproven), to protect them from a progression to AD. Moreover, for both these higher-risk and normal individuals, interventions should not be thought of as one-time cure-alls. Ongoing brain fitness training shall be the way to go.

    A major obstacle is that there is not enough research funding for appropriate trials to address all of these issues, especially as they apply for the mildly cognitively impaired (pre-AD) or the AD populations. We’d welcome not only more research dollars but also more FDA involvement, to help clarify the claims being made.

    Next Generation Assessments

    A key element for the maturity of the field will be the widespread use of objective assessments. What do you see in that area?

    Unfortunately, most researchers and policy initiatives are still wedded to relatively rudimentary assessments. For example, I recently participated in meetings designed to help define a very-well-supported EU initiative on how cognitive science can contribute to drug development, in which most applied assessments and most assessments development were still paper-based. This is a major missed opportunity, given the rapidly growing development and availability of automated assessments.

    I believe we will see more independent assessments but also embedded assessments. For instance, in Scientific Learning we routinely use ongoing embedded assessments and cross-referenced state test achievement scores to develop models and profiles designed to determine the regimes of neuroplasticity-based training programs that must be applied so that individual students, school sites and school districts may achieve their academic performance goals.

    Implications for Medicine and Mental Health

    It seems clear that neuroplasticity-related assessment and training tools will impact medicine and mental health. Where and how do you think that may happen first?

    This may surprise people who haven’t been following the area closely, but I believe cognitive training may well become a crucial part of the standard of care in schizophrenia over the next 3 or 4 years. With academic partners at UCSF, Yale and Konstanz University, and through the development of programs that effectively address cognitive deficits that limit this patient population, we have already designed a training program that is appropriate for evaluation in a medical-device-directed FDA trial. There is already agreement about the application of the MATRICS neurocognitive assessment battery for an FDA outcomes trial in this population, and NovaVision’s FDA approval of their stroke & TBI rehab strategies provide any important FDA precedent.

    The NIH has been a key enabler of the NIH Toolbox, and the MATRICS process, both to standardize assessments. What impact may these have in schizophrenia and beyond?

    The FDA’s adoption of MATRICS as a standard is a crucial step, because it provides a clear set of benchmarks that apply for any drug or non-drug approach to treatment. We would like to see the FDA establish similar benchmarks for all major clinical indications in neurological and psychiatric medicine. I haven’t followed the ToolBox so closely, and can’t really comment about its possible utility.

    If we talk about wider clinical practice, we must recognize that many psychologists are attached to older forms of therapy that don’t incorporate contemporary cognitive neuroscience findings, and that neurologists and psychiatrists are strongly pharmaceutically oriented, and in any event are greatly pressed for time. Perhaps clinical practice will only change once we have developed the tools necessary to help professionals monitor the brain function and training (treatment) status of the very large number of patients that might typically be under their care.

    Integrating Cognition with Home Health and Medical Home Models

    That’s a very interesting point. How may remote monitoring and interventions happen? Is this similar to the model Cogmed uses today to deliver its working memory training via a network of clinicians?

    We will probably see hybrid models emerge first. The clinician will, as usual, establish a diagnosis and initiate treatment in their office or clinic, probably with the assistance of a trained therapist. At some point, the therapy will continue at home. The therapist and the supervising clinician would be able to remotely monitor the patient’s performance by the use of our Internet tools. This model, originally developed and widely applied by Scientific Learning, has also been employed by Cogmed.

    Only later may full telemedicine models emerge, where perhaps a neurologist monitors the brain function of several patients using appropriate tools, and identifies potential personalized preventive interventions with red flags that call for an office (or virtual) visit.

    What’s Next?

    This has been a fascinating conversation, and a great context to the themes we will cover in depth in the summit. What else do you think will happen over the next few years?

    First, I believe we’ll need to focus on public education, for people to understand the value of tools with limited “face value”. One important aspect of this is the need to find balance between what is “fun” and what has value as a cognitive enhancer – which requires the activities to be very targeted, repetitive and slowly progressive. Not always the most fun – people need to think “fitness” as much or more than “games.”

    Second, I believe the role of providing supervision, coaching, support, will emerge to be a critical one. Think about the need for having a piano teacher, if you want to learn how to play the piano and improve over  time. Technology may help fill this role, or empower and richly support real “coaches” who do so.

    Which existing professional group is more likely to become the “personal brain trainers” of the future? or will we see a new profession emerge?

    Frankly, I don’t know. To give you some context, at Scientific Learning we experimented with offering free access to therapists for a 2-month training. At Posit Science we first experimented with virtual ‘coaches’ that many people seemed to hate, and later encouraged people who had completed the program to volunteer and coach new participants. Results were mixed. We’re now exploring other possibilities.

    Let me mention a few other aspects. I believe we will also see a growing number of applications in languages other than English, which will be key given growing interest in South Korea, Japan and China on aging workforce issues (until now they have been mostly focused on childhood development, using English-based programs). We will also see the programs widely available to people who may not have computers at home. For example, Posit Science recently donated software equivalent in value to $1m to the Massachusetts public library system, as a model of how wider access (in this case, to help older drivers) might be provided.

    My dream in all of this is to have standardized and credible tools to train the 5-6 main neurocognitive domains for cognitive health and performance through life, coupled with the right assessments to identify one’s individual needs and measure progress. For example, I’d like to know what the 10 things are that I need to fix, and where to start. Assessments could either measure the physical status of the brain, such as the degree of myelination, or measure functions over time via automated neuropsych assessments, which is probably going to be more efficient and scalable and potentially be self-administered in a home health model.

    Mike, thank you very much once more for your time and insights.

    My pleasure. I am lookingsharpbrains_summit_logo_web forward to the very innovative Summit that SharpBrains is putting together to convene our little growing community.

    For more information on the SharpBrains Summit (January 18-20th, 2010): click Here.

  • OUTRAGE OF THE DAY: Idiot Company Retaliates Against Shortseller In Innovative New Way

    AngryCouple

    A respected institutional investor sends the following note describing an innovative new way an idiot manager is punishing him for betting against the company.

    For what it’s worth, based on our years on Wall Street, the investor is exactly right: The stronger the reaction from the company, the more they’re hiding and the more likely the stock will crash.

    One of the headaches (joys?) of being a short seller is the occasional (frequent?) vitriol from companies – and my experience is that the stronger the reaction from the company, the more they’re hiding and the harder the stock will crash. 

    For example, I found out recently that the CFO of a company we’re short told his child to end the friendship with my child because of what I’d said about his company.  I am not making this is up – it’s psycho on so many dimensions! 

    Incidentally, we immediately shorted more, not in anger but because:

    A) How bad must things be at the company if the CFO is so freaked out by a few passing mentions that we’re short his stock to react this way?; and

    B) Knowing that a company has a psycho CFO makes it an even higher-conviction short.

     

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  • Technology Transfer Tactics, December 2009 Issue

    The following is a list of the articles that appear in the December 2009 issue of Technology Transfer Tactics monthly newsletter. If you are already a current subscriber click here to log in and access your issue. Not a subscriber already? Subscribe now and get access to this issue as well as access to our online archive of back issues, industry research reports, sample MTAs, legal opinions, sample forms and contracts, government documents and more!

    Technology Transfer Tactics,
    Vol. 3, No. 12 (pp 177-192) December 2009

    • Best practice tools and strategies for university start-ups. A start-up is by definition lacking in experience. And though a few lucky ones have veteran leaders who’ve been through the process before, that’s the exception rather than the rule when it comes to university spinouts. It stands to reason, then, that start-up managers are in dire need of best practices, and that’s exactly what Georgia Tech’s Advanced Technology Development Center (ATDC) is delivering. The center has posted a series of best practice documents on its website in an attempt to reach out to more of the region’s start-ups than it can work with directly.
    • New push for global access licensing attracts broad support, adds complications. In the latest milestone in a movement that has been gaining steam for at least the last decade, the Association for University Technology Managers (AUTM) and six prominent universities have endorsed a “Statement of Principles and Strategies for the Equitable Dissemination of Medical Technologies.” The statement is a general outline of seven practices designed to ensure that university licensing facilitates, rather than impedes, the delivery of life-saving medicines to the developing world.
    • U of Delaware creates IP gateway to boost commercialization. In less than three years, technology transfer at the University of Delaware (UD) in Newark has evolved from an acknowledged bare-bones licensing effort into broad-scale commercialization activity.
    • Use patent analytics to ID licensees and get deals done. Finding licensees for your IP is a challenge in any environment, but in a recession it can seem more like waiting for lightning to strike — and about as likely. The key to sniffing out deals in a down economy, according to one IP consultant, is taking a proactive approach and increasing your odds by employing patent analytics.
    • TAEUS introducing new ways to attract licensees. TAEUS International Corp., based in Colorado Springs, CO, is on the cusp of launching several software products in early 2010 that could help university TTOs implement standardized systems to describe patented technologies for the IP marketplace and then put those technologies in front of potential licensees, says Matt Troyer, vice president of innovation at the full-service IP firm.
    • Patenting partnership makes TTO’s law firm part of the team. As a relatively small technology transfer office, the Office of Economic Innovation and Partnerships (OEIP) at the University of Delaware (UD) in Newark “doesn’t have the luxury of being able to personally guide every single invention or patent application that comes into our office,” says Bruce Morrissey, director of technology development at OEIP’s IP Center. “So we developed a team approach with our law firm to get some leverage on that process.”
    • Manage expectations of state lawmakers to secure long-term support for tech transfer. Politics and tech transfer make strange bedfellows, but with jobs and revenues evaporating in many states, it’s increasingly difficult for TTOs to avoid turf wars in the halls of their own statehouses. And some of the battles are getting ugly.
  • Oil Prices Falling Again

    oilAlong with everything else, oil is selling off.

    —-

    AP: Oil prices fell to around $72 a barrel Thursday as investors mulled whether recent signs of recovering crude demand can be sustained next year and the dollar strengthened against other currencies.

    By early afternoon in Europe, benchmark crude for January delivery was down 70 cents to $71.96 in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

    On Wednesday, the contract surged by $1.97 to settle at $72.66 after the Energy Information Administration said that crude supplies and distillate fuels including heating oil dropped by more than analysts expected.

    Some analysts are skeptical that demand growth can continue beyond the middle of next year as the impact of massive government stimulus spending begins to ebb.

    London-based Capital Economics expects oil to fall to near $50 a barrel by the end of next year on weaker than expected demand and a stronger U.S. dollar. Investors have often bought commodities such as crude this year as a hedge against inflation.

    “As the boost from policy stimulus starts to fade and underlying weaknesses reassert themselves, demand should slow again,” Capital Economics said in a report.

    “If we are right that the U.S. dollar resumes its recent recovery and fears of inflation and asset bubbles fade, oil prices should drop back next year too.”

    JBC Energy in Vienna noted that the weekly EIA report also contained bearish data and wasn’t as supportive of the spike in crude prices as some may have thought.

    The inventory data also contained a fair share of bearish data that seems to have been overlooked,” JBC said in a market report, pointing to lower crude imports as one of the reasons for the drop in crude stocks. “Meanwhile, the strong drawdown in distillates was caused by colder weather and not a rebound in economic activity … Indeed, it will take more of an ice age rather than just seasonal weather to correct this overhang.”

    Fluctuations in the dollar’s exchange rate continued to influence oil prices. Commodities priced in dollars become cheaper for investors holding other currencies when the dollar weakens, but a stronger dollar sometimes points investors in other directions.

    The release of weekly U.S. unemployment claims later Thursday will be watched closely by the market for signs of how the world’s largest economy is doing.

    “The U.S. economic figures could impact the direction of the U.S. dollar, and it looks like the current crude oil price could be quite sensitive to any U.S. dollar movements,” said analysts at Sucden Financial in London.

    On Thursday, the euro was near a three-month low, down to $1.4360 from $1.4516 late Wednesday in New York while the British pound slipped to $1.6115 from $1.6310.

    In other Nymex trading in January contracts, heating oil fell 1.37 cents to $1.9521 while gasoline fell 1.25 cents to $1.8614. Natural gas rose 8 cents to $5.542 per 1,000 cubic feet.

    In London, Brent crude for February delivery fell 65 cents to $73.64 on the ICE Futures exchange.

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