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  • Seasonality, Climate and Diet

    AfricanSavannahEvolution and seasonality are inextricably intertwined. This isn’t a negotiable, controversial statement, because evolution describes an organism’s response to environmental pressures, and the seasons are part of the environment. Another uncontroversial statement is that the study of human evolution can give us insight into what constitutes a healthy lifestyle for modern humans. I think it’s reasonable, then, to suggest that understanding how seasonality affected human evolution might give even more insight into best practices.

    Most examinations of prehistoric climate change deal with average global temperatures, which can explain overall worldwide trends in climate, but when we’re talking about human evolution – that is, on the changes in the human organism that resulted from immediate, localized environmental pressures – knowing the mean global average doesn’t tell us much. To understand how seasonality affected our development, we need to look beyond the global trends. We need to look at specific climate conditions.

    The seasons change in many ways. There’s the obvious one – winter to spring to summer to fall – but how that inter-seasonal transition plays out depends on the overall climatic conditions of the environment. That is, winter has meant different things in different regions and at different times in history. Some places, winter is cold and dry, others warm and wet. Seasonality depends heavily on climate.

    Okay, so let’s take a look at our data. We’ve got a glacial period lasting 111,000 years, or half the time modern humans have been around (the last half). Throughout this glacial period, common geological features in the north included glaciers, huge sheets of continental ice, changing warm/cold seasons, and arid conditions, all of which make vegetation seasonal and life fairly difficult.

    Man grew up in the tropics. Yeah, there are subtropics and neotropics and whatever other distinctions you want to make, but the bulk of our evolution took place in tropical Eastern Africa, where and when it was warm. We also came of age during a glacial period that only just (11,000 years ago) ended. That glacial period was part of a larger ice age that began around 2 to 3 million years ago. We’re still in an ice age, technically, though popular parlance gets “ice age” and “glaciation” mixed up. An ice age is composed of glacial and interglacial periods. Today, we’re in the middle of an interglacial period.

    That last glacial period (what we generally refer to as “the ice age,” incorrectly so) began around 111,000 years ago and lasted 100,000 more. Modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) have been around for 200,000 years – that’s us. So, about half our time on Earth has been spent dealing with a glacial period. What’s involved in a glacial period, you might be wondering? Well, popular notions of glacial periods include barren tundra, steadily encroaching ice sheets, unstoppable glaciers (hence “glaciation”), hairy men (and women, I suppose) in animal pelts, seasonal vegetation, and wild game with massive stores of saturated back fat. For the northern latitudes, this is pretty accurate imagery. Canada and the northern United States were completely covered by ice. The Scandinavian ice sheet spanned the British Isles, Germany, Poland, Russia, and western Siberia. The Himalayas, Caucasus, and Alps experienced considerable glaciation. Glaciers reached Taiwan, the Japanese Alps, as well as the mountains of Morocco, Algeria, and Ethiopia. The hominids living in the affected areas, then, probably embodied the classic “caveman” lifestyle (the ones who survived, that is).

    Sixty thousand years ago, when Europe was icy and forbidding, modern humans weren’t there. Neanderthals were, though, and they were undoubtedly made for the region. Bulky, robust, heavy set, muscular, with pronounced brow ridges – these guys were your archetypal cavemen. But they were not modern humans. When we finally did head northward out of Africa into Europe, around 40,000 years ago, we actually displaced the extant Neanderthals. We mingled and interacted with them along the way, and we may have even interbred with them, but we are not Neanderthals. Those early Europeans were still Africans, genetically, as the famous Hofmeyr Skull showed.

    So, what does seasonal, evolutionary eating actually mean? To whom do we look for ultimate guidance?

    In the Primal community, there’s a tendency to hone in on the European hunter-gatherer experience for guidance in all things dietary. The big-game hunting, cave-painting Cro-Magnon is the first thing that comes to mind for most of us. That’s fine, to a point, but not when it means excluding from consideration of other hunter-gatherer populations living in completely different climates. We have to take it all in. It’s all relevant. They’re all humans.

    If it’s human, it’s relevant, and we have to pay attention.

    East Africa, the predominant site of human evolution, experienced the seasons as wet and dry, rather than hot and cold. It was always warm. There wasn’t widespread glaciation, except in the mountains. There were no African ice sheets. Glacial periods affected African climate, sure, but not by creating a winter wonderland. Glacial periods manifested as droughts and in the development of arid deserts and grasslands. Vegetation and game were available. Now, drought and desert undoubtedly altered the scope of human evolution by heavily impacting the humans (our ancestors) living there; it’s just a mistake to assume glacial periods meant fur coats and holing up in caves for the winter for everyone worldwide.

    Put another way, when eating seasonally, do we eat according to the seasonal patterns experienced by our East African ancestors or our European/North American/Australian/Asian ancestors? Do we look to the past as a road map, or do we merely eat what’s in season at local farmers’ markets?

    I’m not sure, but I’ll venture the safest guess I can muster.

    All of the above. Everything matters. One thing is for certain, though: we’ve all got that African Homo sapiens sapiens blood running through our veins. Each of us – irrespective of nationality, ethnicity, or recent ancestry – has several hundred thousand years of tropical evolution to account for. That’s when we developed our taste for animal flesh and our big beautiful brains. But we’re adaptable creatures, us humans. We can thrive on different diets with different macronutrient ratios.

    As long as you stick with the basics and avoid those foods that weren’t available, regardless of season, stuff like refined sugar, vegetable oils, grains, and legumes, everything else is just fudging with the margins. Keep one eye on the tropics and another on the Paleolithic climatic region of your choice. Could a descendent of Northern Europeans, a regular Norseman, thrive on a tropical diet of fish, coconuts, pork, and yams? I bet he could. Could a Native American grow old and strong on the modern Primal hybrid eating plan of Big Ass Salads, omelets, and crock pot recipes? Sure, why not.

    Seasonality shouldn’t be limiting. The fact that our ancestors evolved with perennial warmth and were still able to thrive in regions with actual seasons means we can handle just about anything. It means we can eat according to any season as long as we remember the basic nutritional laws that bind us all together, rules that were initially written in the tropics and then expanded upon in myriad other climates, seasons, and regions.

    Thank you for reading this series of posts in which I explored the role seasonality plays in the human diet and health. If you missed any you can catch up here:

    The Question of Seasonality in Human Health and Nutrition

    The Question of Seasonality in Fructose Availability

    Seasonality for the Birds

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. The Question of Seasonality in Human Health and Nutrition
    2. The Question of Seasonality in Fructose Availability
    3. Seasonality for the Birds

  • Funeral procession held in downtown L.A. for fallen police officer


    Funeral3

    The funeral procession for
    LAPD Officer Robert J. Cottle, killed March 24 in Afghanistan while on
    Marine Reserve duty, was moving through the streets of downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday morning.

    COTTLE-27922-Face  Thousands were expected to pay tribute to Cottle at a service at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.

    Cottle’s casket, covered in an American flag, was being carried in a wagon by horseback from Los Angeles Police Department headquarters to the cathedral, with a group of law enforcement officers walking alongside and to the back.

    Onlookers lined some street corners, watching as the procession passed by.

    Cottle, 45, was traveling with three other Marines
    in the Marja region of southern Afghanistan, which has been the focus of an
    intense U.S.-led offensive against Taliban forces in recent weeks.

    Cottle,
    who joined the LAPD in 1990 and won a coveted SWAT position six years
    later, is the first active LAPD officer to be killed in Iraq or
    Afghanistan, police officials said.



    A veteran of two tours of
    duty in Iraq, Cottle deployed to Afghanistan in August 2009
    and was scheduled to return home this summer. Officers recalled a
    friend who stood out even in the rarefied air of SWAT for the intensity
    he brought to the LAPD’s most demanding assignment and the care he
    showed for other officers who had turned him into one of the unit’s
    leaders.

    Their armored vehicle struck an improvised explosive device, killing
    Cottle and another Marine and seriously wounding the two others, said LAPD Capt. John Incontro, who oversees SWAT operations. 

    Here are details about the memorial:

    TRAFFIC

    The funeral procession will start at the new LAPD headquarters and end
    at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels.
    Portions of 1st Street, Broadway, Spring Street, Temple Street, Hill
    Street, and Grand Avenue will be closed as early as 6 a.m., according
    to the LAPD.

    TRANSPORTATION

    Metro bus service in downtown Los Angeles will be affected.
    A funeral procession will begin at 8:45 a.m. at the Police
    Administration Building, located at 100 W. 1st St., and will proceed to
    the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels at 555 W. Temple St. Numerous
    Metro bus lines in the Civic Center area will be detoured from 6 a.m.
    to 2 p.m., at which time bus service will return to its regular
    schedules. Metro bus lines affected by the detours will include:
    2, 4, 10, 14, 30, 31, 37, 40, 42, 42A, 45, 48, 55, 60, 68, 70, 71, 76,
    78, 79, 81, 83, 84, 90, 91, 92, 94, 96, 302, 333, 355, 439, 445, 485,
    487, 489, 714, 730, 740, 745, 770, 794 and Silver Line, according to
    the L.A. Department of Transportation.

    — Shelby Grad

    Wardeadteaser

    California’s War Dead database: Read more than 100 memories shared by Cottle’s friends and family on his memorial page. Share your own memories and learn more about his life and the lives of more than 580 other men and women from California who have died while supporting the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

    Photo: Funeral procession for Robert Cottle begins down 1st Street in downtown Los Angeles. Credit: Marc Martin / Los Angeles Times

    LAPD Officer Robert J. Cottle. Credit: LAPD

     

  • Where Motorola stands on Android 2.1 updates

    Motorola Android 2.1 update

    Loyal reader Tom Cochrane reminded us on Twitter that Motorola has a status board for its Android 2.1 roll-out. And above is where we stand as of today. If you’re rocking the Milestone, updates are either in progress or should be coming in the few months or so. Same goes in the U.S. for the Backflip, Cliq and Cliq XT. Hang in there, folks. [Motorola] (And thanks, Tom.)

  • VIDEO: Consumer Reports Brings Science To KFC Double Down Test

    As we mentioned yesterday in our completely unscientific taste test of the KFC Double Down, we were really just tagging along with our smarter sibling Consumer Reports as they gathered their team to pull some major science on the bacon-and-cheese-between-two-pieces-of-fried-chicken sandwich-ish type thing.

    And so the CR testers piled into the van yesterday and drove to the local KFC, where they picked up several bags of the belly busting Double Downs — and tested them right away in the back of the van, so as to sample them right off the grill (or out of the microwave, or however KFC heats them up).

    Unlike Consumerist’s instant-gratification “tastes good to mah belly” test, CR’s testers aren’t there to describe whether or not they personally enjoyed the sandwich, but to evaluate the various facets of the sandwich: Is the coating crispy? Is it real white meat or reformed? How fatty is the bacon?

    By answering these questions, CR gives you the over-all picture of the Double Down and lets you decide whether or not it’s something you’d want to plunk down $4.99 on.

    CR is also sending off a few Double Downs to the lab for a nutritional analysis — My guess, it will come back saying, “Ingredients = 100% table salt.”

  • Fórmula 1: GP da Coréia pode ser cancelado da temporada


    Uma das etapas da Fórmula 1 2010 está ameaçada de ser cancelada no dia 24 de outubro. Falo do Grande Prêmio da Coréia do Sul, que estaria pela primeira vez participando do calendário da temporada de F1. A razão do possível cancelamento é o atraso nas obras que pode criar um atraso de 4 semanas entre os GPs do Japão e Brasil.

    O chefão da F1, Bernie Ecclestone, foi pessoalmente para a Coréia para avaliar as condições do circuito, e definir se a primeira corrida a ser realizada em Yeongam irá realmente acontecer, ou será retirada da temporada.

    Até mesmo o conhecido arquiteto criador de circuitos Hermann Tilke se mostra apreensivo com a conclusão dentro do tempo determinado dessa pista. Ele confessa que: “Pela primeira vez eu estou preocupado com o fato de um circuito não ficar pronto a tempo”.

    Via | Motorpasion


  • Top Free BlackBerry Apps

    Oftentimes, when we discuss BlackBerry applications for our daily post, we’re featuring premium applications. There are some free applications mixed in there, but typically the free applications don’t get as much airtime. We’re going to overcompensate for this by listing a ton of free BlackBerry apps. How many? To be honest, I never counted. I just compiled a list and put them in some discernible order. If you’re ever on the hunt for BlackBerry applications, or know someone looking to fill her Berry with freebies, make sure to check out what follows.

    (more…)

  • Report: Senator to investigate GM’s handling of Hummer deal

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    General Motors has already begun turning the lights off at its Hummer brand, though that may be no fault of multiple potential buyers. We’re not just talking interested parties from China here, either. According to brand enthusiast website HummerGuy, several American-based companies have expressed viable interest in snapping up the SUV-slinging manufacturer over the past few months. Even more surprisingly, all of the potential offers have reportedly fallen on deaf ears.

    Both Raser Technologies and Electric Motors Corporation have supposedly made The General offers worth considering, and GM has left them unanswered. These whispers haven’t just been crawling around the web – they’ve evidently made their way all the way to Illinois Senator Roland Burris (above), who has promised to look into the matter himself.

    While we’d be thoroughly surprised if such an investigation had any repercussions, we have to wonder why GM would say no both of the EV builders unless it thinks it can make more money winding down the brand by selling off tooling and manufacturing rights, or perhaps just avoiding bureaucratic headaches. Some experts believe GM might be worried about competition from future extended-range EVs, but we have a hard time imagining one of the world’s biggest manufacturers losing sleep over a couple of startups. Either way, as with Saab before it, there remains a sliver of hope for the brand, but we certainly wouldn’t bet on another eleventh-hour miracle.

    [Source: HummerGuy | Image: Burris.senate.gov]

    Report: Senator to investigate GM’s handling of Hummer deal originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 13 Apr 2010 11:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Another Kin One and Two hands-on

    ZDNet’s Matthew Miller has had an extended period with the Microsoft Kin One and Two, and have published this 11 minute walk-through of the features of the handsets.

    He notes that the handsets were pretty compelling, but for the target market the main issue will the the ongoing costs of the data plans, which needed to be much cheaper than standard for Verizon for the phones to catch on.

    Read more at the Smartphone blog here.


  • eBay Scammers Evolve, Use Live Chat “Customer Service Reps”

    Grace almost got scammed on eBay. A fraudster cracked a high-value seller’s account and posted a fake listing for a camera and tried to make Grace pay for it using Western Union, a huge warning sign of a scam. That’s typical, but these criminals went the extra mile. “Above and beyond,” if you will. When she tried to ask some questions about the transaction, they directed her to a live online chat that was mocked up to look like a real eBay customer service chat and tried to assuage her concerns by telling her it was okay to use Western Union because she had “buyer protection!” Hers her story and the chat transcript so you can learn and not get burned:

    This is an eBay deal I won’t be doing. But it is pretty amazing how far they went to try to convince me it would be a real transaction, fake online chat staff and all. I read Consumerist often so I figured it out in time, but…wow.

    Here’s how it went down:

    1. The item, a camera lens, was listed under a verified seller’s eBay account. The seller had more than 2300 positive reviews, a dozen active listings and a storefront. There were about 10 pictures of that particular used lens and an in-depth description of its condition. There was a great return policy. I read a few pages of feedback and visited a link to their used electronics brick-and-mortar store in New Jersey. Feedback was excellent and I felt solid about the seller.
    2. The seller asked in the item description that questions to be directed to a specific gmail account rather than eBay because they couldn’t access eBay at work or something like that. It seemed a little weird but not unheard of, and I figured, hey, they have such great feedback… How can 2300 other people be wrong?
    3. I emailed a question about the item, they (“Craig”, the name of the seller as listed on eBay) wrote back within a few minutes and said it was mine for the Buy It Now price if I wanted it, and they asked for an address to calculate shipping costs. Still, there was no “Buy It Now” link on the auction, and I asked for them to post it officially on the auction itself to complete the transaction through the regular channels.
    4. They didn’t respond to my request for a “Buy it Now” link on the auction. Instead, I get this email (below), confirming the sale through eBay, which asks for payment via Western Union. Warning bells went off (thanks, Consumerist!) and I wrote back that I would do the sale only with Paypal and I asked for their Paypal information. No response to that, even though I heard back within about 2 minutes the last time. I was hoping somehow the listing was real even as evidence mounted that it wasn’t. I guess there’s no place for optimism when it comes to eBay.
    5. An email comes from eBay saying the listing is pulled because the seller’s account had been compromised by someone else, which confirms my suspicions. The seller WAS legit, so I was right about that. But the listing wasn’t theirs.
    6. I did a live chat linked from the email below, which is the kicker, and is copied below. You can probably chat with them via the same link if you want.The chat spoofs eBay’s page and is a secure site.

    I knew there were sketchy sellers with sketchy eBay sites, but I thought those could be spotted by the lack of feedback, bad English, no return policies, etc. I hadn’t really considered encountering one fake auction mixed in with a dozen real auctions under an actual legitimate seller’s account. I also didn’t think scammers had internet chat staff waiting online, but hey, what do I know.

    CHAT FROM LINK BELOW:

    : We appreciate your patience. You will be able to type in your question as soon as you are connected with a Live Help Agent. Please continue to hold for the next available representative. (Conversation directed to any operator).
    You are successfully connected to eBay Live Help. Please hold for the next available Live Help Agent.
    : Sarah B. has entered the conversation.
    : Hello and thank you for contacting eBay Account Security Live Help, my name is Sarah B. How may I help you?
    : Hi there, I want to make sure an auction is legitimate. The seller asked to be contacted outside of eBay and I had gotten a message saying the listing was pulled, but now a message saying it is okay?
    : May i have the transaction number and your full name please?
    : This is the item:
    : http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=120555703605
    : [] is my full name
    : They are asking for payment via Western Union.
    : Ok, may i have the transaction number so i can check if it is valid.
    : #KLW34532346354633
    : Please hold while i check if this transaction it is valid.
    : Thank you for waiting. This is a valid transaction and it is covered by our Buyer Protection Program. We have full access to seller’s account, if the buyer don’t receive the item, eBay will take the money from seller’s account and send a full refund to the buyer. Note: Western Union it is accepted only for this type of transaction.
    : Why is Western Union only accepted for this type?
    : Because we have access to seller’s account and we can send your money back if you don’t get the item.
    : And Buyer’s Protection means a full refund if I don’t get it or its not as described? Can I ask why the listing was pulled as “compromised”?
    : That’s correct. If the item it is not as described you will need to send it back to the seller and we will send a full refund. You received that notification by e-mail because the seller ended the auction early when you accepted to buy it.
    : The email said that I received it because someone else had accessed the seller’s account and NOT to proceed with the sale. It says right on eBay: “Pay safely online by never using instant cash transfer services such as Western Union or MoneyGram International to pay for your eBay purchases. These payment methods are unsafe when paying someone you do not know. Learn more.”
    : Yes, dismiss that message. Never use instant cash transfer services such as Western Union or MoneyGram International to pay for your eBay purchases when you don’t get the buyer protection.
    : This is a private transaction on eBay that’s why we accept the payment by Western Union.
    : Can you send me a link to the Buyer Protection? I only found on Ebay that it helps you talk to the seller but can’t find anywhere that it says eBay will refund you the money from their account.
    : I am here to confirm you that this is a valid transaction and you are 100% covered doing it this way. So you should feel safe. Next step, you should send the payment to the seller so he can ship your package.
    : Thank you for using eBay!
    : Sarah B. has ended chat session.. Please, Click for Sending This Conversation Send TransScript

    Scam signs:
    1. Directs user to use contact outside eBay system
    2. Asks you to pay outside of eBay using Western Union
    3. Everyone knows it’s impossible to get a human at eBay.

  • Chrysler, NASA team up to share knowledge and technologies

    While General Motors and NASA are teaming up on a new humanoid robot called Robonaut 2 or R2, Chrysler announced today that it is forming a three year alliance with NASA to share information related to advanced technologies in several areas of mutual interest including space exploration and automotive technologies.

    “This is a great opportunity to share knowledge and data in areas where both Chrysler Group and NASA have a vested interest,” said Scott Kunselman, Senior Vice President, Chrysler Engineering. “We value the opportunity to work with NASA and will implement what is learned to further improve our Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep and Ram Truck products.”

    Chrysler said that it is studying several advanced technology topics for synergies and shared interest, including: materials engineering, robotics, radar, battery systems and other energy storage mediums.

    Project teams have been assigned to different technologies, and each team includes a Chrysler Group and a NASA technical specialist.

    Chrysler has apparently already benefited from the alliance from shared research on reliable surface navigation sensors.

    – By: Kap Shah


  • LG VS740 spotted in VZW inventory system

    LG VS740

    Remember the LG Aloha that originally surfaced a few weeks ago with model number LG C710?  What about the LG LU2300 (aka Eclipse) that is reportedly heading to SK Telekom this May as the supposed South Korean variant of the Aloha?  Well, if that wasn’t enough, let me throw another model number at you.

    According to PhoneArena, the LG VS740 has made its way into Verizon’s inventory system, though there’s not much more to go on aside from the picture above.  We know we’ll be seeing a nifty Android-powered LG device in the future, but other than that your guess is as good as mine.  So, let’s have a little fun, shall we?  I’ve compiled the rumored specs of the C710 and the LU2300, and this is what you get (a respectable device by all accounts):

    • 3.5-inch AMOLED 800×480 touchscreen
    • 65,000 color display
    • Wi-Fi 802.11b/g/n
    • GPRS, UMTS, HSDPA and HSUPA
    • Android 2.1
    • 1 GHz Snapdragon processor
    • Sliding 4-row QWERTY keyboard
    • 5 megapixel camera
    • 720p HD DivX compatible playback
    • Wi-Fi, GPS, DMB tuner

    I have no clue what Verizon’s plan is with upcoming Android phones, but I know several people who have been doubling up on their anxiety medication as of late.  Perhaps they’ll just pick a day and launch all of the highly anticipated devices at once, causing a mad dash where the most difficult decision will be which Android device to pick.

    Got your running shoes ready?  Sound off in the comments! 

    Via AndroidandMe


  • An Official Android Tablet from Google May Be Coming

    Tablet PCs are all the rage right now and it’s easy to see why. Apple has recently released the iPad and the hyped device seems to be living up to its expectations, at least in terms of sales. Now more than ever, device manufacturers and Apple competitors in general want in on the game. Google is becoming one of Apple’s biggest th… (read more)

  • Ford Needs a *Little* Convincing When it Comes to Small Diesels in the U.S.

    If you’re a fan of small to mid-sized diesel passenger cars and are frustrated with our lack of choice on the matter in the U.S. listen up: Ford says that they won’t bring diesels here until they see enough demand. So get on the horn, type out an email, write letters to national magazines and let Ford, your politicians and your state auto dealer associations know that the demand is out there.

    What’s crazy is that they need to be given the nudge though… all it takes these days is to look at the success other manufacturers are having with diesels in the U.S. to know that there is demand. (more…)

  • Square Enix trademarks ‘The 4 Heroes of Light’

    It looks like Hikari no 4 Senshi: Final Fantasy Gaiden will be getting an international release. Square Enix has filed a trademark for “The 4 Heroes of Light”, a name that bears a very distinct resemblance to the

  • Mirror neurons reemerge | Gene Expression

    A few years ago I was hearing a lot about mirror neurons. There was a hyped up article on The Edge website about them, MIRROR NEURONS and imitation learning as the driving force behind “the great leap forward” in human evolution. But I haven’t heard much since then, though I’m not neuro nerd so perhaps I’m out of the loop. So I pass on this link with interest, Single-Neuron Responses in Humans during Execution and Observation of Actions:

    Direct recordings in monkeys have demonstrated that neurons in frontal and parietal areas discharge during execution and perception of actions…Because these discharges “reflect” the perceptual aspects of actions of others onto the motor repertoire of the perceiver, these cells have been called mirror neurons. Their overlapping sensory-motor representations have been implicated in observational learning and imitation, two important forms of learning [9]. In humans, indirect measures of neural activity support the existence of sensory-motor mirroring mechanisms in homolog frontal and parietal areas…other motor regions…and also the existence of multisensory mirroring mechanisms in nonmotor region…We recorded extracellular activity from 1177 cells in human medial frontal and temporal cortices while patients executed or observed hand grasping actions and facial emotional expressions. A significant proportion of neurons in supplementary motor area, and hippocampus and environs, responded to both observation and execution of these actions. A subset of these neurons demonstrated excitation during action-execution and inhibition during action-observation. These findings suggest that multiple systems in humans may be endowed with neural mechanisms of mirroring for both the integration and differentiation of perceptual and motor aspects of actions performed by self and others.

    ScienceDaily has a hyped-up headline, First Direct Recording Made of Mirror Neurons in Human Brain.

    Update: Neuroskeptic has much more.

  • MTV “Jersey Shore” Boston Spinoff “Wicked Summer”

    (Insert sigh here….) Make way for another Jersey Shore spinoff…..

    MTV is casting for a spinoff series of its popular reality docu-soap, this one set in Boston. The network is currently casting for the new series – called Wicked Summer – which is scheduled to begin production in July, E! Online reported this week.

    Interested? Here’s what Wicked Summer is looking for: “The hottest girls and proudly buff guys who believe in God, family, politics, sports, beer and partying! You share a love for muscle cahs, hair products, and little necks on the frickin half shell. You don’t take shit from nobody — least of all each othah.”

    Wicked Summer cast mates are also expected to be a fixture on the Beantown club scene and to exhibit a command of Boston’s distinct New England accent.

    The second season of Jersey Shore premieres July 29.

  • Mid-Day Update: Stocks Falling, Here’s What You Need To Know

    goodyearIndices:

    • DJIA: Down 13 points to 10,991.
    • NASDAQ: Down 3 points to 2454.
    • S&P 500: Down 4 points to 1192.

    Today’s biggest gainers on the S&P 500:

    • DeVry Inc (DV): $70.57 / +8.47%
    • Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co (GT): $13.45 / +3.78%
    • Fastenal Co (FAST): $53.85 / +3.76%

    Today’s biggest losers on the S&P 500:

    • Avon Products Inc (AVP): $32.10 / -7.65%
    • Huntington Bancshares Inc (HBAN): $5.64 / -6.47%
    • KeyCorp (KEY): $7.99 / -4.20%

    Commodities:

    • Oil: Down 1.9% or $1.64 to $82.70 a barrel.
    • Gold: Down 1.3% or $15.20 to $1147 an ounce.
    • Silver: Down 2.3% or $0.43 to $17.98 an ounce.

    Futures:

    • Generally in the red across the board; metals and crude falling fast.
    • Soybean meal, cotton, sugar, and wheat are showing solid gains.
    • Natural gas futures slightly up.

    Now here are the stories you need to know:

     

    FUTURES NOON April 13th

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • NAFTA Crew Rides Again to Remove High-Enriched Uranium From Mexico

    More “house gifts,” as Jeffrey Lewis of the New America Foundation calls them, from the Nuclear Security Summit, just announced by the White House:

    At the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, D.C., Mexico, the United States, and Canada reached agreement to work together, along with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), to convert the fuel in Mexico’s research reactor. President Calderon expressed “the strong commitment of Mexico to prevent and suppress nuclear terrorism; with this kind of cooperation with the IAEA and our North American partners, we definitely contribute to reducing the risks associated with illicit trafficking of nuclear materials.”

    The three countries acknowledged that this project also provides an important step towards the replacement of the research reactor with a new low-enriched uranium fuelled reactor in support of Mexico’s nuclear energy development.

    The conversion of the reactor’s use of highly enriched uranium (HEU) to low enriched uranium (LEU) fuel will enable the elimination of all the remaining highly enriched uranium from Mexico. This effort, a specific outcome of Nuclear Security Summit, will be completed under the auspices of the IAEA. It will further strengthen nuclear security on the North American continent.

  • Alfa Romeo Giulietta, precios disponibles

    Como todos sabemos, la comercialización del nuevo Alfa Romeo Giulietta es inminente por lo que es normal que Alfa Romeo vaya publicando la información que hasta la fecha desconociamos. En este caso, se han dado a conocer los precios de las distintas motorizaciones y acabados de este compacto.

    En lo que respecta a las motorización, tendremos disponibles 5, todas ellas sobrealimentadas, y 3 equipamientos diferentes, Progression, Distinctive y Quadrifoglio Verde. Las potencias van desde los timidos 105 CV hasta los 235 CV.

    A continuación os dejo con la lista de precios:

    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.6 TS 120 CV Progression – 20.725€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.6 TS 120 CV Distinctive – 22.425€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.4 TB MultiAir 170 CV Distinctive – 24.925€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.750 TBI 235 CV Quadrifoglio Verde – 29.925€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.6 JTDm 105 CV Progression – 20.870€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 1.6 JTDm 105 CV Distinctive – 22.570€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 2.0 JTDm 170 CV Progression – 26.395€
    • Alfa Romeo Giulietta 2.0 JTDm 170 CV Distinctive – 28.095€

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  • Paperboy Mobile App Bridges Print-Online Newspaper Gap

    For those of you who, when reading ye olde printed newspaper, have felt the urge to click an in-page link or email an article to a friend – a new service out of Switzerland is trying to bridge the gap.

    iPhone app Paperboy recognises pictures users snap of article pages, corresponds them to their online equivalents and then lets readers share or read online.

    The Swiss edition of European commuter newspaper 20 Minutes says it is now using Paperboy to let readers send articles to Facebook and Twitter friends and to store articles in a digital locker. German-language titles including Focus and EuroSoccer are also ensuring their publications are recognisable by the system.

    Paperboy is a reversioning of the eponymous app made by image-recognition developer Kooaba, which lets users snap, store and send listings for various shopping products and also lets advertisers extend print campaigns online.

    Via NewspaperInnovation.