1,718 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2017
    1. A. M. Bliuc, C. McGarty, E. F. Thomas, G. Lala, M. Berndsen, R. Misajon, Public division about climate change rooted in conflicting socio-political identities. Nat. Clim. Change 5, 226-230 (2015)

      Bliuc and colleagues demonstrate that U.S. climate change worriers and skeptics hold very different social identities. These social identities have been formed around their opinion toward climate change (acceptance and concern vs. skepticism toward the science) rather than around demographic characteristics like religion or political party. The authors suggest that opinion about climate change has become a source of inter-group conflict similar to that surrounding the issues of abortion or same-sex marriage.

    2. L. Tay, E. Diener, Needs and subjective well-being around the world. J. Pers. Soc. Psychol. 101, 354-365 (2011)

      Psychologists have proposed for many years that human well-being increases when certain needs are fulfilled. Studies have explored basic physiogical needs, safety and security needs, social needs, and respect and autonomy needs. Little research, however, has examined whether these needs are common to all humans, or whether some of them are culture-specific.

      Tay and Diener looked at the relationship between different kinds of needs and subjective well-being in 123 countries. They found evidence that all human beings share a variety of psychological and social needs in addition to basic needs.

    3. T. Dietz, E. Ostrom, P. C. Stern, The struggle to govern the commons. Science 302, 1907-1912 (2003)

      This classic Science article examines Hardin's Tragedy of the Commons scenario with respect to global environmental commons such as oceans, freshwater, clean air, and the climate and atmosphere.

      Dietz, Ostrom, and Stern suggest that it is difficult to govern global environmental commons because many of the features of historically successful commons management are missing at the global scale. These features include limiting access to the resource, monitoring resource use, promoting frequent face-to-face contact between users, and enforcing rules dictating resource use.

      When it comes to our global environmental commons, the authors are guardedly optimistic that we can implement effective forms of governance and not over-exploit global natural resources.

    4. R. M. Ryan, E. L. Deci, Self-determination theory and the facilitation of intrinsic motivation, social development, and well-being. Am. Psychol. 55, 68–78 (2000). doi:10.1037/0003-066X.55.1.68

      Self-determination theory suggests that people are most motivated by situations that help them fulfill basic needs: autonomy, relatedness, and competence.

      People need autonomy, to feel they have choices and are free to decide what, when, and how to proceed, rather than being forced by rules, deadlines, or evaluation by others. We seek relatedness, a sense of being socially connected and accepted by others. Competence is the need to accomplish an action with grace and achieve the desired outcome, as opposed feeling uninformed, or not having the requisite skills or abilities to achieve success.

    5. R. Gifford, A. Nilsson, Personal and social factors that influence pro-environmental concern and behavior: A review. Int. J. Psychol. 49, 141-157 (2014)

      This is a review article, organizing and summarizing what research has been conducted and suggests what future research should focus on.

      Gifford and Nilsson review 18 factors that influence whether people behave in ways that help rather than hurt the environment. They organize the factors into two basic categories: personal and social.

      The authors also recognize that people sometimes behave in pro-environmental ways because it is practical (such as saving money) and not because of these personal and social factors.

    6. T. Hartig, P. H. Kahn Jr., Living in cities, naturally. Science 19, 938-940 (2016)

      This article reviews how important it is for humans to maintain a connection with nature, especially when living in city environments. Research shows that our emotional and physical health improves when we engage with nature. There are many natural features that can be added to streets and buildings to facilitate keeping connected with nature including urban rivers, parks for play, and rooftop gardens.

  2. Mar 2017
    1. By then end of my PhD, I had over 800 documents in my Sente library incuding journal articles and full books, many with highlights and notes. How am I supposed to find interesting bits related to one concept, idea or topic? My highlights and notes are there somewhere in those documents but there is no easy way of tracking them down and working with them. They are searchable or can be made searchable (see Jeff Pooley’s guide  on Macademic here), but that is often not very helpful. I would for instance like to see them in one place organized according to some logic. My current practice is that I make the highlights in Sente for any potential future use and at the same time I copy the text (quote) to Scrivener with the citation info and keep these snippets organized there. I would for instance have a card for ‘innovation (def.)’ in which I would only collect various definitions of innovation from the sources I read.

      Interesting process. I have tended to export all notes from one reference in a batch, and then organize them in DevonThink. In theory, this process is more efficient (I think) because I can process large numbers of notes in one go without constant app-switching. On the other hand, though, the method outlined is wonderfully direct: when you find information you need, you put it where you're going to need it.

    1. his tradi-tion, in which the theory of invention is reduced to a minimum and interest is focused on the per-suasive aspect of discourse, is represented by such original works as George Campbell's The Philosophy of Rhetoric (1776) and Richard Whately's Elements of Rhetoric (1828)

      Oh, hey, we know those guys. It's been a while since they've been mentioned in our readings, though.

  3. Feb 2017
    1. E. Y. Chiang, A. Hidalgo, J. Chang, P. S. Frenette, Nat. Methods 4, 219–222 (2007).

      This 2007 paper from Chiang et al. presented a new method for looking at the recruitment of different types of white blood cells to the site of an injury, while simultaneously identifying clusters of ligand-receptor couplings.

      All of this can be visualized in live mice!

      From this initial study, PSGL-1 was identified as a promising neutrophil ligand protein.

  4. Jan 2017
    1. T. F. Goreau, Ecology 40, 67 (1959).

      Goreau describes the species of corals found in Jamaica's reefs and the patterns of their distributions. He notes that the north and south coasts look different from each and hypothesizes that these differences are driven by differences in storm frequencies.

    2. J. H. Connell, Science 199, 1302 (1978).

      Connell describes a mechanism by which the high biodiversity of tropical rain forests and coral reefs is maintained by...

    3. N. Knowlton, J. C. Lang, M. C. Rooney, P. Clifford, Nature (London), in press.

      Severe tropical storms can cause widespread mortality in reef corals1,2. The Caribbean staghorn coral, Acropora cervicornis, although dependent on fragmentation for asexual propagation3–5, is particularly vulnerable to hurricane damage6,7. The most important agents of post-hurricane mortality are assumed to be high wave energy6 and change in salinity8, factors which typically soon diminish in intensity. We report here that there was substantial delayed tissue and colony death in A. cervicornis on a Jamaican reef damaged by Hurricane Alien. This previously undocumented degree of secondary mortality, sustained for 5 months and unrelated to emersion9, was over one order of magnitude more severe than that caused by the immediate effects of the storm. The elimination of >98% of the original survivors suggests potentially complex responses to catastrophes, involving disease10,11 and predation, which may explain the widely variable rates of reef recovery previously reported12–15.

    4. J. W. Porter, Science 186, 543 (1974).

      Coral reefs on both the Pacific and Caribbean sides of Panama do not experience extreme weather events such as hurricanes. Coral diversity in Panama is maintained by mechanisms other than extreme weather disturbances, such as predation by the crown-of-thorns seastar, Acanthaster planci.

    5. J. G. Ogg and J. A. Koslow, Pac. Sci. 32, 105 (1978).

      Researchers in Guam describe minimal damage to hard coral reefs after a typhoon and no long-term impact, even in exposed areas. This is likely due in part to the low, rugged profile of reefs in Guam.

    1. T. M. Errington et al., An open investigation of the reproducibility of cancer biology research. eLife 3, e04333 (2014). doi: 10.7554/eLife.04333; pmid 25490932

      Similarly to the reproducibility project in psychology, Errington and colleagues planned to conduct replication attempts on 50 important papers from the field of cancer biology. While the registered reports are already available online, the replication studies themselves are currently still being conducted.

      Read more on eLife: https://elifesciences.org/collections/reproducibility-project-cancer-biology

    2. B. A. Nosek, J. R. Spies, M. Motyl, Scientific utopia: II. Restructuring incentives and practices to promote truth over publishability. Perspect. Psychol. Sci. 7, 615–631 (2012). doi: 10.1177/1745691612459058; pmid 26168121

      Nosek and colleagues argue that scientists are often torn between "getting it right" and "getting it published": while finding out the truth is the ultimate goal of research, more immediately, researchers need to publish their work to be successful in their profession.

      A number of practices, such as the establishment of journals emphasizing reports of non-significant results, are argued to be ill suited for improving research practices. To reconcile the two seemingly-at-odds motives, Nosek and colleagues suggest measures such as lowering the bar for publications and emphasizing scientific rigor over novelty, as well as openness and transparency with regard to data and materials.

    3. L. K. John, G. Loewenstein, D. Prelec, Measuring the prevalence of questionable research practices with incentives for truth telling. Psychol. Sci. 23, 524–532 (2012). doi: 10.1177/ 0956797611430953; pmid 22508865

      John, Loewenstein and Prelec conducted a survey with over 2,000 psychologists to identify to which extent they used questionable research practices (QPRs). The respondents were encouraged to report their behavior truthfully, as they could increase donations to a charity of their choice by giving more truthful answers.

      Results showed that a high number of psychologists admitted to engaging in QRPs such as almost 70% of all respondents admitting to not reporting results for all dependent measures, or around 50% of respondents admitting to reporting only studies that showed the desired results. Moreover, results showed that researchers suspected their peers also occasionally engaged in such QRPs, but that psychologists thought that there was generally no good justification for engaging in QRPs.

    4. D. Fanelli, “Positive” results increase down the hierarchy of the sciences. PLOS ONE 5, e10068 (2010). doi: 10.1371/journal. pone.0010068; pmid 20383332

      Fanelli assessed more than 2000 papers from different scientific disciplines and found that the proportion of studies reporting support for their hypotheses increased in the disciplines such as psychology or economics compared to disciplines such as space science. It is concluded that both the type of hypotheses tested and the rigor applied in these tests differ between fields.

    5. K. S. Button et al., Power failure: Why small sample size undermines the reliability of neuroscience. Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 14, 365–376 (2013). doi: 10.1038/nrn3475; pmid 23571845

      Button and colleagues study the average statistical power of studies in neuroscience, and conclude that it is low. They highlight that low power does not only mean that studies have a lower chance of detecting a true effect, but that when using such low-powered studies, it is also becomes less likely that a significant effect indeed reflects a true effect. It is argued that using studies with low power may seem efficient at the first glance, because less money is spent on subjects, but that indeed, because future research could be building on an erroneous line of investigations, low-powered studies are inefficient in the long-run.

    6. J. K. Hartshorne, A. Schachner, Tracking replicability as a method of post-publication open evaluation. Front. Comput. Neurosci. 6, 8 (2012). doi: 10.3389/fncom.2012.00008; pmid 22403538

      Hartshorne and Schachner suggest that replication success should be traced in a database connecting replication attempts with original studies. Based on this information, a replication success score could be computed, which could be used as a criterion for a journal's quality alongside other indicators such as citation counts.

    7. G. S. Howard et al., Do research literatures give correct answers? Rev. Gen. Psychol. 13, 116–121 (2009). doi 10.1037/a0015468

      Howard and colleagues examine how the file drawer problem affects a research literature. They compare "old", existing bodies of literature that could be suffering from the file drawer problem (i.e., which could include the few studies were an effect was found, while studies yielding non-significant results on the same effect were never published) with a newly constructed body of literature guaranteed to be free of the file drawer problem, which they achieved by conducting new studies. This investigation suggests that some bodies of literature are supported as relatively file-drawer-free, while other bodies of literature raise concern and kindle further studies on the effects they include.

    8. A. G. Greenwald, Consequences of prejudice against the null hypothesis. Psychol. Bull. 82, 1–20 (1975). doi 10.1037/h0076157

      Greenwald examines how research practices discriminate against accepting the null hypothesis (that an effect does not exist). Using a simulation, he suggests that too few publications accept the null hypothesis, and that the proportion of publications which falsely reject the null hypothesis although it would have been true is high.

      Greenwald further debunks traditional arguments why a null hypothesis should not be accepted, and suggests ways to improve research practices to improve the acceptance of accepting the null hypothesis.

    9. J. P. Simmons, L. D. Nelson, U. Simonsohn, False-positive psychology: Undisclosed flexibility in data collection and analysis allows presenting anything as significant. Psychol. Sci. 22, 1359–1366 (2011). doi: 10.1177/0956797611417632; pmid 22006061

      Simmons and colleagues conduct computer simulations and two experiments that show how significant results can easily be achieved for a research hypothesis that is false. They show that flexibility - or as they call it: researcher degrees of freedom - in four areas contributes to making it more likely to find significant effects for a false hypothesis:

      1. Flexibility in choosing the dependent variables reported: When researchers flexibly analyze two related dependent variables, this already almost doubles the probability of finding a positive result for a false hypothesis. 2. Flexibility in choosing the sample size: When researchers stop data collection, find no significant result, and collect additional data before checking for the same effect, this increases the probability of finding a positive result for a false hypothesis by 50%.
      2. Flexibility in the use of additional variables included in the analyses: When researchers include additional variables in the analyses, false positive rates more than double.
      3. Flexibility in the number of experimental conditions reported: When researchers collect data in three experimental conditions and flexibly decide whether to report the result of comparisons between any two conditions or all three, this more than doubles the false positive rate.

      If researchers used research practices where they used all four flexibilities, they would, overall, be more likely than not to find positive results although the underlying hypothesis was indeed false.

    10. R. Rosenthal, The file drawer problem and tolerance for null results. Psychol. Bull. 86, 638–641 (1979). doi: 10.1037/0033- 2909.86.3.638

      Rosenthal addresses the 'file drawer problem', a questionable research practice where only studies that showed the desired result would be published and all other studies would land in the 'file drawer' and would not be known to the scientific community.

      In the extreme case, this could mean that, if a specific effect did not exist in reality, the 5% of studies that (due to statistical error allowed) find this effect get published and discussed as if the effect were true, whereas 95% of studies do not (and rightly so) find the effect, but are tucked away in a file drawer. This problem hinders scientific progress, as new studies would build on old, but false, effects.

      Rosenthal introduces a way to assess the size of the file drawer problem, the tolerance to future null results: calculating the number of studies with null results that would have to be in a file drawer before the published studies on this effect would be called into question.

    1. V. Vähätalo, M. Salkinoja-Salonen, P. Taalas, K. Salonen, Spectrum of the quantum yield for photochemical mineralization of dissolved organic carbon in a humic lake. Limnol. Oceanogr. 45, 664–676 (2000).

      This study measured sunlight driven conversion of DOC to CO<sub>2</sub> in a lake in southern Finland. They measured lower quantum yields than the authors found in the paper you just read.

  5. Nov 2016
    1. and what shall be the sign

      This line is from the Gospel of Mark.

    2. and the giver of Life

      This line is from the Chaldean Oracles.

    1. Y. Yan, S. Shin, B. S. Jha, Q. Liu, J. Sheng, F. Li, M. Zhan, J. Davis, K. Bharti, X. Zeng, M. Rao, N. Malik, M. C. Vemuri, Efficient and rapid derivation of primitive neural stem cells and generation of brain subtype neurons from human pluripotent stem cells. Stem Cells Transl. Med. 2, 862–870 (2013).

      This study presents an efficient method to produce neural stem cells from human pluripotent stem cells.

      The system presented in this study enables the creation of NSC banks, increasing cell therapy applications.

    2. Z. W. Naing, G. M. Scott, A. Shand, S. T. Hamilton, W. J. van Zuylen, J. Basha, B. Hall, M. E. Craig, W. D. Rawlinson, Congenital cytomegalovirus infection in pregnancy: A review of prevalence, clinical features, diagnosis and prevention. Aust. N. Z. J. Obstet. Gynaecol. 56, 9–18 (2016).

      This study examines the effects on the developing fetus of congenital cytomegalovirus infection.

    3. C. Grief, R. Galler, L. M. C. Côrtes, O. M. Barth, Intracellular localisation of dengue-2 RNA in mosquito cell culture using electron microscopic in situ hybridisation. Arch. Virol. 142, 2347–2357 (1997).

      In this study, Grief et al used electron microscopy to localize dengue virus in infected mosquito cells.

      They concluded that the smooth membrane structures are an important site for the production of virus particles.

    4. H. Tang, C. Hammack, S. C. Ogden, Z. Wen, X. Qian, Y. Li, B. Yao, J. Shin, F. Zhang, E. M. Lee, K. M. Christian, R. A. Didier, P. Jin, H. Song, G. L. Ming, Zika virus infects human cortical neural progenitors and attenuates their growth. Cell Stem Cell 18, 1–4 (2016).

      Tang’s article highlights the impact of ZIKV infection on both cell death and dysregulation of the cell cycle.

    5. G. Calvet, R. S. Aguiar, A. S. Melo, S. A. Sampaio, I. de Filippis, A. Fabri, E. S. Araujo, P. C. de Sequeira, M. C. de Mendonça, L. de Oliveira, D. A. Tschoeke, C. G. Schrago, F. L. Thompson, P. Brasil, F. B. Dos Santos, R. M. Nogueira, A. Tanuri, A. M. de Filippis, Detection and sequencing of Zika virus from amniotic fluid of fetuses with microcephaly in Brazil: A case study. Lancet Infect. Dis. (2016).

      In this article, the authors were able to detect the Brazilian Zika virus in amniotic fluid and compare its genome to other Zika strains and flaviviruses. In doing so, they hoped to find out if there had been recombination events between them.

      The authors collected amniotic fluid samples from women whose fetuses were diagnosed with microcephaly, extracted DNA purified virus particles, and analyzed the samples with qRT-PCR.

      They found that the different viruses share 97–100% of their genomes and that there had been no recombination events.

    6. C. G. Woods, J. Bond, W. Enard, Autosomal recessive primary microcephaly (MCPH): A review of clinical, molecular, and evolutionary findings. Am. J. Hum. Genet. 76, 717–728 (2005).

      Woods et al. discuss some clinical aspects of microcephaly but mainly focus on molecular and evolutionary factors.

      From an evolutionary point of view, changes in genes linked to a microcephalic phenotype might have been responsible for the evolution of the human brain size.

      Woods et al. also note that microcephaly is the consequence of a mitotic deficiency in neural precursors.

    7. E. C. Gilmore, C. A. Walsh, Genetic causes of microcephaly and lessons for neuronal development. WIREs Dev. Biol. 2, 461–478 (2013).

      Microcephaly is caused by abnormal cell growth in the brain leading to a reduced brain size.

      Mutations in genes involved in the cell cycle could be one factor causing this phenomenon.

      Here, the authors showed that variations in brain size is more related to the number of connections between neurons.

    1. P. Azoulay, J. Graff-Zivin, D. Li, B. Sampat, Public R&D investments and private sector patenting: Evidence from NIH funding rules, NBER working paper 20889

      This paper shows a link between grants and private-sector innovations and created a model to quantify the variation in funding for different fields.

      Their results show an increase in private-sector patents by NIH.

    2. R. K. Merton, Science 159, 56–63 (1968).

      In this article, the sociological expression "the rich get richer and the poor get poorer", also called Matthew effect, is presented in the context of scientific publication.

      Scientists who have received grants in the past are more likely to get more grants and produce results.

    3. B. A. Jacob, L. Lefgren, J. Public Econ. 95, 1168–1177 (2011).

      The authors of this paper evaluated the impact of NIH grants on publications. They concluded that researchers who did not get an NIH grant but simultaneously applied for others grants saw one more publication (+7%).

    4. J. Berg, Productivity metrics and peer review scores: NIGMS feedback loop blog (2011)

      This article is a reasonable hypothesis that preliminary data that contribute to receiving an outstanding peer review score likely lead to high visibility publications shortly after the grant is funded.

    5. S. Cole, J. R. Cole, G. A. Simon, Science 214, 881–886 (1981).

      This article is about one negative effect of peer review, that an individual scientist devotes so much time and energy to getting financial support that it takes away from their science.

      Basically, a huge disadvantage of the peer review program is that scientists must spend too much time writing what they intend to research, rather than performing the research.

    6. B. Alberts, M. W. Kirschner, S. Tilghman, H. Varmus, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 111, 5773–5777 (2014).

      Bruce Alberts, Marc W. Kirschner, Shirley Tilghman and Harold Varmus describe the advances in scientific knowledge and human health that have accrued as a result of the long-standing public investment in biomedical research.

  6. Oct 2016
      • 5:48 Expert Political Judgment

        • Discusses the concept of Integrative Complexity
          • People with a lot of integrative complexity are more capable of reasoning about complex issues, distinguishing between facts and opinions, and seeing the world clearly as it is.
            • People who lack this quality tend to think in terms of black-and-white, and to have an arrogant and antagonistic attitude.
            • Fame is inversely correlated with integrative complexity
      • 11:29 The Big Sort by Bill Bishop

        • There is an ongoing trend, especially on the Internet, but also geographically, for people to cluster based on their own worldview, while they become less and less open to different ideas.
          • The content filtering mechanisms of Tumblr and other social media websites, where you can simply unfollow whoever you disagree with, are the reason why this phenomenon is so prevalent on the Internet.
      • 14:20 Pan's Labyrinth
        • Moral parable with "think for yourself; don't just blindly obey" as its message.
    1. - "Doing good (high quality work) matches with doing well (achieving wealth and professional advancement) in the field." -

      What's the source?

    2. a whole new field called positive psychology
    3. - "People are very bad at predicting what will bring them happiness." -

      What's the source?

    4. to quote Notorious B.I.G. - "Mo money mo problems"
    5. "The Happiness Hypothesis" by Jonathan Haidt
    6. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_psychology
    1. the demon scrupulously takes part in all these matters, sees all things, understands all things, and dwells in the most profound recesses of the mind, in the place of conscience.  He of whom I speak is entirely our guardian, our individual keeper, our watcher at home, our own proper regulator, a searcher Into our inmost fibres, our constant observer, our inseparable witness, a reprover of our evil actions, an approver of our good ones; if he is becomingly attended to, sedulously examined and devoutly worshipped, in the way in which he was worshipped by Socrates in justice and in innocence; he is our forewarner in uncertainty, our monitor in matters of doubt, our defender in danger, and our assistant in need. He is able also by dreams, and by tokens, and perhaps even openly, when necessity demands it, to avert from you evil, to increase your blessings, to aid you when depressed, to support you when falling, to lighten your darkness, to regulate your prosperity, and modify your adversity.

      This part is quoted in a talk on the Thelemic concept of Holy Guardian Angel here.

    1. the daemon who presides over you inquisitively participates of all that concerns you, sees all things, understands all things, and in the place of conscience dwells in the most profound recesses of the mind [see note 6]. For he of whom I speak is a perfect guardian, a singular prefect, a domestic speculator, a proper curator, an intimate inspector, an assiduous observer, an inseparable arbiter, a reprobater of what is evil, an approver of what is good; and if he is legitimately attended to, sedulously known, and religiously worshipped, in the way in which he was reverenced by Socrates with justice and innocence, will be a predictor in things uncertain, a premonitor in things dubious, a defender in things dangerous, and an assistant in want. He will also be able, by dreams, by tokens, and perhaps also manifestly, when the occasion demands it, to avert from you evil, increase your good, raise your depressed, support your falling, illuminate your obscure, govern your prosperous, and correct your adverse circumstances.

      This part is quoted in a talk on the Thelemic concept of Holy Guardian Angel here.

    1. Some references made in this video:

  7. Sep 2016
    1. J. J. Palop, J. Chin, L. Mucke, Nature 443, 768 (2006).

      This review was written by members of the same lab in which Dr. Roberson did the work described in this paper.

      It outlines how the symptoms experienced by Alzheimer's patients seem to fluctuate constantly, suggesting that these symptoms cannot just be caused by dying neurons (which would result in symptoms that would get progressively worse).

      The authors discuss known changes in other proteins in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients and how these protein networks might work together to mediate symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease in the brain.

    2. K. SantaCruz et al., Science 309, 476 (2005).

      Santa Cruz and colleagues studied genetically modified mice that had a mutation in the human version of the tau gene, which caused those mice to get tau tangles like those seen in Alzheimer’s disease.

      Knocking out this tau gene allowed the mice to avoid memory and cognitive problems, although the tangles still formed.

    3. A. J. Myers et al., Hum. Mol. Genet. 14, 2399 (2005).

      Myers and colleagues examined patients that had died of progressive supranuclear palsy, a disease caused by a mutation in the tau gene.

      They found that these patients also had an increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease, pointing to an important connection between tau and Alzheimer’s.

    4. R. Tanzi, L. Bertram, Cell 120, 545 (2005).

      Tanzi and Bertram review the "amyloid hypothesis," which is the idea that a build-up of amyloid-β into plaques causes problems in tau, which then form tangles, causing the symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease.

    1. G. D. Gilfillan et al., Am. J. Hum. Genet. 82, 1003 (2008)

      This study was about mutations in the SLC9A6 gene, which are related with neurological diseases, such as X-linked mental retardation, microcephaly, epilepsy, and ataxia, a phenotype mimicking Angelman syndrome.

      By using the experimental methods of linkage analysis and DNA sequencing they found out that a deletion in the SLC9A6 gene, encoding the Na(+)/H(+) exchanger NHE6, is basically responsible for these symptoms.

    2. M. L. Jacquemont et al., J. Med. Genet. 43, 843 (2006)

      M. L. Jacquemont worked on the genetic heterogeneity of syndromic autism, more easily revealed through array-CGH. The author suggested that this method should be prioritized in order to diagnose autism. This study also revealed that patients with locus duplications are less affected that those presenting deletions. Finally, the importance of the chromosomal imbalance has no direct relation with the severity of the mental retardation.

    3. J. Sebat et al., Science 316, 445 (2007).

      Sebat and colleagues worked on the involvment of de novo Copy Number Variations in autism.

      They showed that specific CNVs were mostly present in only one family among the tested group. They were also able to show the difference between simplex families, where autism is the result of spontaneous mutation and multiplex, where autism is most likely inherited.

    4. J. A. Vorstman et al., Mol. Psychiatry 11, 1 (2006).

      Vorstman provides a review of much of the recent cytogenetic studies on autism. In these studies, researchers were able to identify abnormalities by looking at the shapes and sizes of chromosomes. From these observations, they were able to deduce if there were large-scale deletions, repetitions, or inversions in the chromosomes. A small percentage (about 3%) of autistic patients had mutations like this. Vorstman gathers these findings into one article and proposes regions scientists should focus on in future research.

    5. P. Szatmari et al., Nat. Genet. 39, 319 (2007).

      P. Szatmari and colleagues have shown that copy number variants (CNV) were risk factors and causal events for autism. However, they are not the only parameters to be taken into account : oligogenic inheritance - inheritance of genes which, in a small quantity, code major changes - would be a prevalent factor of autism.

    6. R. Canitano, Eur. Child Adolesc. Psychiatry 16, 61 (2006)

      In this article, R. Canitano emphasizes the link between autism and epilepsy, showing that seizures are more frequent when mental retardation is associated with autism. The rate of comorbidity - cohabitation between two diseases, autism and epilepsy here - is estimated at 20-25%, meaning that this amount of autistic people is victim of seizures. This link has to be taken into account when considering therapy.

    7. E. Fombonne, J. Autism Dev. Disord. 33, 365 (2003).

      E. Fombonne has provided a review of epidemiological surveys on autism, in order to draw general conclusions. He concluded that autism is associated with mental retardation in about 70% of the cases and is overrepresented amongst males. He also showed that social class has no impact on the incidence of the disease. He also considered that available surveys did not allow to conclude that race or ethnicity influence the incidence of autism. Finally, no data could support the idea of secular evolution in the incidence of the disease.

    8. N. Risch et al., Am. J. Hum. Genet. 65, 493 (1999).

      Risch and colleagues studied the genetic makeup of subjects affected by autism.

      They showed that autism is most likely caused by multiple genes and identified several genes that could play a part in this disease in different individuals.

    9. A. E. West, E. C. Griffith, M. E. Greenberg, Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 3, 921 (2002).

      This study was about the regulation of specific transcription factors by neuronal activity. They found out, by using techniques as mass spectrometry and chromatin immunopreuritation, that synaptic activity determines the expression of a set of neural gene products.

      In this study also, a large nuclear protein, Cabin 1 (calcineurin-binding protein), was found out to be q cqlcium-regulated depressor of MEF2 activity.

    10. G. A. Cox et al., Cell 91, 139 (1997)

      This study was about a spontaneous mouse mutant, called slow-wave epilepsy (swe), which is related to several neurological syndromes, like ataxia, as well as about a unique epilepsy phenotype, that is characterized by 3/sec absence and tonic-clonic seizures.

      swe was fine-mapped on Chromosome 4 and identified as a null allele of Nhe1, which is the Na+/H+ exchanger, a ubiquitous, and acts as an integral membrane protein involved in pH regulation. It removes intracellular acid, exchanging a proton for an extracellular sodium ion.

    1. J. Celichowski, K. Grottel, Acta Neurobiol. Exp. (Warsz.) 58, 47–53 (1998).

      The aim of this study was to show the influence of two stimuli (produced in a short time sequence and called doublet) on the time where a tetanus was observed. By using single motor units of rats, it was shown that the doublet induced an increase of the tetanic tension and fusion. Also that slow motor units showed higher reaction to the doublet sensitivity than fast units.

    2. F. E. Zajac, J. L. Young, J. Neurophysiol. 43, 1206–1220 (1980).

      Researchers took muscle samples from cats and tried different tetanus on them. They seem to have found the efficient pulse and frequencies by the motor neuron to generate a optimum muscle tension.

    3. J. R. Gallant et al., Science 344, 1522–1525 (2014).

      They investigated the evolution of the electric organs of eels. They looked at the DNA of the electric eels and two other species with electric organs. They detected many different genes for the developement of electric organs. Their results show that despite big differences in the electric cells of the investigates species, they have leveraged similar transcription factors and developmental and cellular pathways in the evolution of electric organs.

    4. S. Hagiwara, T. Szabo, P. S. Enger, J. Neurophysiol. 28, 775–783 (1965).

      Some electrical fish produce not enough voltage to get an offensive or defensive meaning. In this study, authors try to understand in which this sorts of fish use this system. It will be demonstrate that it is used as direction and finding of the fish.

    5. K. K. Pedersen, O. B. Nielsen, K. Overgaard, Physiol. Rep. 1, e00026 (2013).

      Effects of high‐frequency stimulation and doublets on dynamic contractions in rat soleus muscle exposed to normal and high extracellular

    6. R. Hennig, T. Lømo, Nature 314, 164–166 (1985)

      By recording firing pattern in motor units of rats, authors demonstrates quantitatively that, contractile properties of the muscular system is improve by the tree different respond allowed (fast but easily fatigued, slow but fatigue resistant, both). Also this paper in studying and recording the normal value of muscular contraction of an healthy rats, will allow the searcher to notice if is somethings wrong or interact with the motor control system. Like in our articles where the Eels's electricity make the muscular system of the fish goes off. "Firing patterns of motor units in normal rats"

    7. G. M. Westby, Behav. Ecol. Sociobiol. 22, 341–354 (1988).

      The researchers investigated the behaviour of electric fish in french guiana. Notably, they describe in first the prey-capture behaviour of the electric eels.

    8. J. Keesey, J. Hist. Neurosci. 14, 149–164 (2005).

      Fish electric organs seams to be derived originally from muscle therefore a source of acetylcholine receptor. The Eels' anatomy was used many in different science domain such as Anatomy, embryology, and physiology. In previous research it was shown that the pathway between the nerve and electric organ used acetylcholine receptor. This is why this species, source of acetylcholine, conduct to very detailed studies by biochemist and neurologist.

    9. S. Finger, M. Piccolino, The Shocking History of Electric Fishes: From Ancient Epochs to the Birth of Modern Neurophysiology (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 2011), p. 5.

      "The Shocking History of Electric Fishes: From Ancient Epochs to the Birth of Modern Neurophysiology" is a book written by Stanley Finger and Marco Piccolino. In this study they follow different types of animal (flat torpedo rays, the electric catfishes, and the "eel" of our article). All three are able to produce electricity shocks and explain how they helped to change the sciences and medicine.

    10. H. Grundfest, Prog. Biophys. Biop. Chem. 1957, 1–85 (1956)

      By studying the electroplaques of Torpedo-nobilian, the researcher try to understand how depolarising or hyperpolarizing changes in membrane potential occur. Furthermore they relief the latency time during stimulation of the nerve and the polarisation of the cells.

    1. W. R. Kerr, The ethnic composition of US inventors, Working Paper 08-006, Harvard Business School (2008)

      This study applies an ethnic-name database to individual patent records granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office to document these trends with greater detail than previously available.

    2. D. F. Horrobin, JAMA 263, 1438–1441 (1990).

      The main goal of peer review in the biomedical sciences is to facilitate the introduction into medicine of improved ways of curing, relieving, and comforting patients. The achievement of this aim requires both quality control and the encouragement of innovation. If an appropriate balance between the two is lost, then peer review will fail to reach its purpose.

    1. R. B. Widelitz, T.-X. Jiang, J. Lu, C.-M. Chuong, b-catenin in epithelial morphogenesis: Conversion of part of avian foot scales into feather buds with a mutated b-catenin. Dev. Biol. 219, 98–114 (2000).

      This paper explored the role of β-catenin (protein involved in growth and thought to be a morphogen) which is expressed in the placode.

      It was found that when this protein was mutated, the chickens would be scaleless(on the feet) and have abnormal feather growth.

    2. C. Blanpain, E. Fuchs, Epidermal stem cells of the skin. Annu. Rev. Cell Dev. Biol. 22, 339–373 (2006).

      The development of skin cells that give rise to hairs is reviewed in this paper.

      A hair placode forms which allow for the expression of genes that determine skin cells and hair follicle development.

    3. D. Dhouailly, A new scenario for the evolutionary origin of hair, feather, and avian scales. J. Anat. 214, 587–606 (2009).

      This paper proposed the theory that mammal hairs evolved from glandular structures. Whereas reptiles and birds skin (including feathers and scales) evolved a different pathway where a thick protective covering which would become scales.

    4. P. F. A.Maderson,Mammalian skin evolution: A reevaluation. Exp. Dermatol. 12, 233–236 (2003).

      This review deals with a model of how hair evolved, updating a model built in the 1972 (reference 3).

      This model supposes that the development of hair was caused by mutations in patterning genes. this development allowed hair to become useful insulation.

    5. M. C. Milinkovitch, L. Manukyan, A. Debry, N. Di-Poï, S. Martin, D. Singh, D. Lambert, M. Zwicker, Crocodile head scales are not developmental units but emerge from physical cracking. Science 339, 78–81 (2013).

      This paper illustrates the way that crocodile head scales form. the process is different to the formation of other skin traits (such as feathers, hair and other scales).

      The crocodile face and jaw scales are formed through the force of the growing cells physically pushing and cracking about hard shell forming unique patterns.

    1. J. B. Silk, in The Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology, R. I. M. Dunbar, L. Barrett, Eds. (Oxford Univ. Press, Oxford, 2007), pp. 115–126.

      Chapter 10: Empathy, sympathy, and prosocial preferences in primates.

      There are several potential lines of evidence for the existence of empathy in nonhuman primates. Because of the subjectivity in interpretation of animals' intentions as well as no defined assay for empathy or sympathy, "we cannot be certain whether any given interpretation is right or wrong."

      "To transform singular observations of behavior into more robust findings we need to develop theoretically grounded hypotheses that we can subject to empirical testing."

      http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Handbook-Evolutionary-Psychology-Handbooks/dp/0199561788

    2. although skeptics remain (27)

      "Current claims for the existence of empathy, sympathy, and moral sentiments and other-regarding preferences in other primates rest on an insecure empirical foundation.

      The anecdotal accounts have limited value because they rely on subjective interpretation of animals' intentions and motivations and they are not systematically collected or analysed.

      This means we cannot be certain whether any given interpretation is right or wrong and we have no means of discriminating against competing claims."

      The chapter covering this controversial view of whether nonhuman animals display empathy may be found here:

      http://www.amazon.com/Oxford-Handbook-Evolutionary-Psychology-Handbooks/dp/0199561788

      Type the word empathy into the "search inside this book" window.

    3. Initially, rats in the trapped condition opened the door in any of three ways: tipping the door over from the side or top or pushing it up with their heads

      From materials and methods: Measuring opening style: Each door opening was classified to indicate how the door was opened.

      Three types of opening were observed:

      1) Rats opened the door by nudging it up with their head from the front of the restrainer (“head”),

      2) rats opened the door by leaning on the heavy side of the door (“side”), or

      3) rats opened the door by standing on top of the door (“top”).

    4. D. Drai, I. Golani , SEE: A tool for the visualization and analysis of rodent exploratory behavior. Neurosci. Biobehav. Rev. 25, 409 (2001).

      This paper describes the patterns rodents take while exploring their environment using a computational method of analysis. SEE allows for the distinction between stopping and progressing, spatial spread, dynamics of space occupancy, number of stops per excursion, and the maximal speeds attained.

      [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0149763401000227]

    5. G. E. Rice, P. Gainer , “Altruism” in the albino rat. J. Comp. Physiol. Psychol. 55, 123 (1962)

      The authors tested whether albino rats could display altruistic characteristics. They defined altruism as "behavior of one animal that relieves another animal's 'distress.'"

      The distress-causing paradigm was using a harness to suspend one rat free from the floor. The second rat is free in a separate compartment and can see and hear the suspended rat.

      The second rat can bring the suspended rat down to the floor by pressing a lever, and did so significantly more than if there was a styrofoam block being suspended.

      These results do point toward rats being capable of altruistic behavior because the rats performed an action that was not beneficial to itself, but that benefits one of its species.

    6. D. J. Langford et al ., Social approach to pain in laboratory mice. Soc. Neurosci. 5, 163 (2010).

      These authors tested whether the purpose of pain expression is to attract comfort or receive aid from conspecifics.

      For this they assayed the likelihood of a free mouse to approach/contact a jailed mouse experiencing pain versus a jailed mouse unaffected by pain.

      This hypothesis was true in the case of female mice but not male mice. However the observer female mice only approached mice that were "known" (i.e., had previous contact with the observer mouse). Thus there is sex specificity to the social approach to pain in laboratory mice.

      The contact made by the free mouse with the mouse in pain resulted in less pain behavior.

    7. R. M. Church , Emotional reactions of rats to the pain of others. J. Comp. Physiol. Psychol. 52, 132 (1959).

      The authors of this paper measure the reaction one group of rats has to the outward show of pain of another rat receiving an electric shock.

      One group of rats had lever pushing for food associated with the electric shock of another rat and a shock to themselves (paired shock). A second group had lever pushing for food associated with only themselves receiving a shock (unpaired shock). The third group received no shock when they pushed the lever for food (no shock).

      The authors then measured the frequency of lever pushing by spectator rats from all three groups (paired shock, unpaired shock, and no shock) in response to shock delivery to the tester rat.

      Rats trained in the paired shock paradigm reacted by significantly less lever pushing compared with the no shock group.

      This suggests that the responses given by the paired shock group may be a result of conditioning rather than that action being a show of sympathy.

    8. J. Decety, P. L. Jackson , The functional architecture of human empathy. Behav. Cogn. Neurosci. Rev. 3, 71 (2004)

      In this review, the authors note that "Empathy involves not only any sentimentally commanded encounters with another person’s actual or inferred emotional state but also some minimal recognition and understanding of another’s emotional state."

      They also highlight the main components of empathy: shared neural representations, self-awareness, mental flexibility, and emotion regulation.

      These components are used together to form a model to predict empathy deficits in social and neurological disorders.

    9. (20–26)

      de Waal et al.

      The authors looked at consolation behavior in chimpanzees. Consolation is ranked under the same umbrella as empathy. In their paper it was defined as "an interaction in which an uninvolved bystander initiates friendly contact with a recent victim of aggression."

      Main finding: The empathy hypothesis that states that consolation is more likely to occur among animals that are socially close was supported.

    1. F. Soliman et al., Science 327, 863 (2010)

      This is a very interesting paper showing that a single-nucleotide polymorphism in the BDNF gene can impair the extinction of a conditioned fear response in both humans and mice. This polymorphism is also associated with anxiety-related behavior and atypical frontoamygdala activity in humans.

      This is important because it suggests that the variant allele may affect the efficacy of exposure therapy, which relies on the process of extinction.

    2. R. Garcia, G. Spennato, L. Nilsson-Todd, J. L. Moreau, O. Deschaux, Neurobiol. Learn. Mem. 89, 560 (2008).

      The goal of this study was to examine the effects of chronic mild stress on hippocampal and medial prefrontal cortex potentiation and extinction memory in rats.

      The authors found that chronic mild stress did not interfere with the extinction of fear, but did impair the recall of extinction.

      They found that chronic mild stress interfered with the development of extinction-related potentiation in the hippocampal/medial prefrontal cortex pathway.

    3. S. A. Heldt, L. Stanek, J. P. Chhatwal, K. J. Ressler, Mol. Psychiatry 12, 656 (2007).

      In this study, the BDNF gene was deleted from the hippocampi of mice. This impaired the animals' ability to recognize new objects, learn spatial orientation, and extinguish conditioned fear.

      These cognitive impairments are also found in anxiety disorders, suggesting that BDNF in the hippocampus may play a role in anxiety and depression.

    4. J. P. Chhatwal, L. Stanek-Rattiner, M. Davis, K. J. Ressler, Nat. Neurosci. 9, 870 (2006).

      This is a very interesting article showing that BDNF, acting through the tyrosine kinase B receptor, is required for the consolidation of stable extinction memories.

    5. W. A. Falls, M. J. Miserendino, M. Davis, J. Neurosci. 12, 854 (1992).

      This is an older paper that was one of the first to show that fear extinction may be an NMDA-dependent process by infusion an NMDA antagonist (AP5) into the amygdala and measuring fear potentiated startle.

    6. A. Burgos-Robles, I. Vidal-Gonzalez, E. Santini, G. J. Quirk, Neuron 53, 871 (2007).

      This paper shows that infusion of CPP, which is an NMDA receptor antagonist, into the ventromedial prefrontal cortex can impair extinction recall.

    7. C. R. Bramham, E. Messaoudi, Prog. Neurobiol. 76, 99 (2005).

      Here, the authors review current research describing the role of BDNF in long-term potentiation, and its known molecular mechanisms.

    8. T. W. Bredy et al., Learn. Mem. 14, 268 (2007).

      In this paper, the authors examine how epigentic gene expression regulation of BDNF enables fear extinction.

    9. F. Sotres-Bayon, L. Diaz-Mataix, D. E. Bush, J. E. LeDoux, Cereb. Cortex 19, 474 (2009).

      This paper investigates the role of NR2-containing N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex and lateral amygdala in the consolidation of fear extinction memories.

    10. F. Sotres-Bayon, C. K. Cain, J. E. LeDoux, Biol. Psychiatry 60, 329 (2006).

      In this paper, the authors examine research that has led to the notion that the medial prefrontal cortex is a critical component in both emotional regulation and fear extinction.

  8. Aug 2016
    1. Given the 51 tons of ivory seized in 2013, the number of elephants killed that year could have exceeded 50,000, out of an estimated 434,000 elephants remaining (4)

      How does the author estimate the number of elephants killed based on the weight of seized ivory?

      It's known that only about 10% of all smuggled goods, such as ivory, drugs, or weapons, are caught by customs. So if 51 tons of seized ivory is only 10% of all poached ivory, the actual amount of all smuggled ivory should be 10 times as high, or about 510 tons (510,000 kilograms).

      510,000 kg of ivory corresponds to about 51,000 elephants.

    2. S. K. Wasser et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 104, 4228–4233 (2007).

      In this study the authors used improved methods to identify the geographic origin of the largest ivory seizure since the 1989 ivory trade ban. They showed that the ivory was from savanna elephants from a narrow east-to-west band of southern Africa, centered on Zambia.

      The findings enabled law enforcement to focus their investigation to a smaller area and fewer trade routes. They also led the Zambian government to improve antipoaching efforts.

    3. S. K. Wasser et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 101, 14847–14852 (2004).

      This earlier paper by the first author describes in greater detail how the genetic reference map was constructed. It also explains the statistical smoothing method that the authors used to assign a geographic location to seized ivory.

    4. A. L. Roca, N. Georgiadis, J. Pecon-Slattery, S. J. O’Brien, Science 293, 1473–1477 (2001).

      This paper shows that African elephants that live in forests are actually a different species than African elephants that dwell in the savanna. Until this paper, all African elephants had been grouped together as a single species.

      The authors proposed two species names: Loxodonta africana for the savanna elephants and L. cyclotis for the forest elephants.

    5. United Nations, The Globalization of Crime (United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, New York, 2010); http://unodc. org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/tocta-2010.html.

      This document is produced by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. It analyzes a range of key transnational crime threats and offers a view of its global dimensions.

    6. K. S. Gobush, B. M. Mutayoba, S. K. Wasser, Conserv. Biol. 22, 1590–1599 (2008).

      This paper examined the long-term impact of poaching on elephant family structure, stress levels, and reproductive output approximately 15 years after the 1989 ivory ban was implemented. Before the ban, widespread poaching drastically altered the demographic structure of the African elephant family groups by decreasing the number of old adult female elephants.

      The authors specifically examined 218 adult female African elephants from 109 groups that differed in size, age structure, and average genetic relatedness.

      Females from groups that lacked an old matriarch, first-order relatives, and strong social bonds had significantly higher stress hormone levels than females from groups where these features existed. Female elephants from groups disrupted by poaching had significantly lower reproductive output.

      The negative impact of poaching persisted 15 years after the 1989 ivory ban was implemented.

    1. enabling the drongo to steal the abandoned food (11,12)

      In this study, the authors demonstrated that drongos are heartless.

      Melissa can edit as SitC

  9. Jul 2016
    1. A. Jacob, L. Lefgren, Are idle hands the devil's workshop? Incapacitation, concentration, and juvenile crime. Am. Econ. Rev. 93, 1560–1577 (2003).

      Findings from this study suggest that when juveniles are not engaged in supervised activities they are more likely to engage in certain anti-social behaviors; at the same time, the increase in interactions associated with school attendance leads to more interpersonal conflict and violence.

    2. L. Lochner, E. Moretti, The effect of education on crime: Evidence from prison inmates, arrests, and self-reports. Am. Econ. Rev. 94, 155–189 (2004).

      Using Census and FBI data, this study finds that schooling significantly reduces the probability of incarceration and arrest.

    3. P. J. Cook, J. Ludwig, in Controlling Crime: Strategies and Tradeoffs, P. J. Cook, J. Ludwig, J. McCrary, Eds. (University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2011), pp. 1–39.

      Controlling Crime considers alternative ways to reduce crime that do not sacrifice public safety. Among the topics considered here are criminal justice system reform, social policy, and government policies affecting alcohol abuse, drugs, and private crime prevention.

    4. W. J. Wilson, When Work Disappears: The World of the Urban Poor (Alfred Knopf, New York, 1996).

      In this book, W. J. Wilson persuasively argues that problems endemic to America's inner cities--from fatherless households to drugs and violent crime--stem directly from the disappearance of blue-collar jobs in the wake of a globalized economy

    5. E. I. Knudsen, J. J. Heckman, J. L. Cameron, J. P. Shonkoff, Economic, neurobiological, and behavioral perspectives on building America’s future workforce. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 103, 10155–10162 (2006).

      This paper concludes that the most efficient strategy for strengthening the future workforce, both economically and neurobiologically, and improving its quality of life is to invest in the environments of disadvantaged children during the early childhood years.

    6. C. Uggen, Work as a turning point in the life course of criminals: A duration model of age, employment, and recidivism. Am. Sociol. Rev. 65, 529–546 (2000).

      A brief overview of research on the relationship between work and crime.

    7. Unemployment and criminal involvement: An investigation of reciprocal causal structures. Am. Sociol. Rev. 49, 398–411 (1984)

      This study showed that unemployment and crime mutually influence one another over the individual's life span.

    1. K. A. Oye, K. Esvelt, E. Appleton, F. Catteruccia, G. Church, T. Kuiken, S. B. Lightfoot, J. McNamara, A. Smidler, J. P. Collins , Regulating gene drives. Science 345, 626–628 (2014).

      This and the subsequent reference discuss the concept of and the dangers associated with gene drives.

      Gene drives are techniques that alter genes in such a way that biases their inheritance, making them spread more rapidly than normal through a population.

      Mutagenic chain reaction is an example of a powerful gene drive method. They list several checkpoints that they recommend be completed before the use of gene drive in endogenous populations, such as designing and testing techniques for reversal of the gene drive and long term studies to fully understand the consequences of a gene drive strategy.

  10. Jun 2016
    1. M. Rosel, C. Claas, S. Seiter, M. Herlevsen, M. Zoller, Oncogene 17, 1989 (1998).

      Describes how C4.4, a human GPI-anchored protein, was found.

    2. G. C. Fletcher et al., Br. J. Cancer 88, 579 (2003).

      Identifies hAG-2 and hAG-3 (nAG homologs) as ligands for C4.4, a GPI-anchored protein in humans.

    3. D. A. Thompson, R. J. Weigel, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 251, 111 (1998).

      hAG-2 (an nAG homolog in humans) is expressed alongside an estrogen receptor in breast-cancer cell lines. The authors propose that hAG may play some role in cancer.

    4. D. B. Drachman, M. Singer, Exp. Neurol. 32, 1 (1971).

      Acetycholine, a neurotransmitter for skeletal muscle, was once thought to be a molecule crucial in limb regeneration. However, this paper shows that when its release is inhibited, the limb still regenerates.

    5. K. Echeverri, E. M. Tanaka, Dev. Biol. 279, 391 (2005).

      Experiments showing the effects of Prod1 overexpression in regeneration are shown. Overexpression causes distal blastema cells to take on a proximal identity and disrupt proper limb patterning.

    6. S. Morais da Silva, P. B. Gates, J. P. Brockes, Dev. Cell 3, 547 (2002).

      This paper shows how Prod1 was discovered in salamanders and provides a basis for this paper, as nAG is ligand.

    7. M. Maden, Nature 295, 672 (1982).

      A research article that shows that vitamin A causes issues with the PD axis during regeneration of salamanders. This paper provides the basis for using vitamin A and other retinoids to disrupt proper limb regeneration.

    8. J. P. Brockes, Science 276, 81 (1997).

      A good overview of limb regeneration, specifically in salamanders. Discusses some molecular mechanisms in regards to limb specification and muscle regeneration.

    1. L. Hartwell, P. Szankasi, C. J. Roberts, A. W. Murray, S. H. Friend, Science 278, 1064 (1997).

      This article discusses the use of genetic profiling in tumors to determine the ideal course of treatment, something that has gained increasing attention as our sequencing technology improved.

    2. A. B. Niculescu et al., Mol. Cell. Biol. 18, 629 (1998).

      This article provided evidence that p21 might play a role in the G2-M checkpoint in addition to its established role at the G1-S checkpoint.

      Additionally, the paper looked at the protein Rb (retinoblastoma) and its role in checkpoint activation. Rb prevents cells from entering S phase when signals from growth factors are absent.

    3. Y. Li, C. W. Jenkins, M. A. Nichols, Y. Xiong, Oncogene 9, 2261 (1994).

      This paper showed that the levels of p21 normally oscillate throughout the cell cycle. However, in cells that did not have functional p53, no p21 was detected, implying that p21 expression is regulated by p53.

    4. A. Paoletti and M. Bornens, Prog. Cell Cycle Res. 3, 285 (1997).

      This paper discusses research on the process of centrosome duplication.

    5. K. Fukasawa, T. Choi, R. Kuriyama, S. Rulong, G. F. Vande Woude, Science 271, 1744 (1996).

      This paper established a role for p53 in the regulation of centrosomes, which enable the cell to separate its chromosomes during mitosis. Cells without functional p53 had abnormal numbers of centrosomes, leading to unequal chromosome segregation.

    6. S. Zhou et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 95, 2412 (1998)

      This paper looked at the role of the protein SMAD4 in a pathway called TGF-β signaling. The authors used homologous recombination to disrupt the SMAD4 gene.

    7. H. Hermeking et al., Mol. Cell 1, 3 (1997).

      This article investigated the G2-M checkpoint in irradiated colorectal cancer cells and found that p53 induced the expression of a protein called 14-3-3, which triggers G2 arrest.

    8. D. P. Cahill et al., Nature 392, 300 (1998).

      This paper showed that mitotic checkpoints are often defective in cancer cells, leading to the chromosomal instability that may drive carcinogenesis (the development of cancer).

    9. T. J. McGarry and M. W. Kirschner, Cell 93, 1043 (1998).

      This paper described the protein geminin, which prevents DNA replication from occurring more than once per cell cycle. Geminin accumulates after DNA replication to block repeated replication, and it is degraded in mitosis so that the cell can replicate its DNA in the next S phase.

    10. P. L. Olive, J. P. Banath, R. E. Durand, Radiat. Res. 146, 595 (1996).

      This article looked into the survival of different cell lines treated with radiation. The authors observed the appearance of "giant cells" that had undergone extra rounds of replication, which in turn generated multiple nuclei.

    11. T. Waldman, C. Lengauer, K. W. Kinzler, B. Vogelstein, Nature 381, 713 (1996).

      This paper showed that when cells lacking p21 were treated with DNA-damaging agents, they frequently underwent extra rounds of replication, which led to deformed nuclei and cell death.

    12. J. P. Brown, W. Wei, J. M. Sedivy, Science 277, 831 (1997).

      This paper established a role for p21 in senescence, an age-dependent decline in the cell's ability to divide.

    13. T. Waldman, K. W. Kinzler, B. Vogelstein, Cancer Res. 55, 5187 (1995).

      This paper showed that p21 functioned downstream of p53 in the activation of the G1-S checkpoint.

    14. L. H. Hartwell and M. B. Kastan, Science 266, 1821 (1994); A. B. Niculescu et al., Mol. Cell. Biol. 18, 629 (1998)

      This review discusses what was known at the time about the regulation of the cell cycle and how we could potentially use this information to design new cancer drugs.

    1. M. A. Cuadros, J. Navascués, Prog. Neurobiol. 56, 173 (1998). 

      An early review of microglial origin in birds.

    2. P. Herbomel, B. Thisse, C. Thisse, Dev. Biol. 238, 274 (2001). 

      This study showed that invasion of embryonic tissue by yolk sac macrophages in zebrafish fails in the absence of macrophage colony-stimulating factor-1.

    3. I. M. Samokhvalov, N. I. Samokhvalova, S. Nishikawa, Nature 446, 1056 (2007).

      The authors of this study generated the RUNX1 fate mapping model used in this study and showed that yolk sac cells expressing Runx1 can develop into fetal lymphoid progenitors and adult hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs).

    4. G. Blevins, S. Fedoroff, J. Neurosci. Res. 40, 535 (1995).

      As shown in this paper, microglia are not affected by the autosomal recessive mutation osteopetrosis (op) that leads to a general skeletal sclerosis and decreased numbers of macrophages in various tissues.

    5. V. Chitu, E. R. Stanley, Curr. Opin. Immunol. 18, 39 (2006). 

      A review of the role of the colony-stimulating factor-1, also known as macrophage stimulating factor, in immunity and inflammation.

    6. F. Alliot, I. Godin, B. Pessac, Brain Res. Dev. Brain Res. 117, 145 (1999).

      This study suggested that microglia derive from yolk sac progenitors and actively proliferate in situ.

    7.  K. Liu et al., Science 324, 392 (2009); 10.1126/science.1170540. 

      This study examines the origin and differentiation of dendritic cells.

    8. S. H. Orkin, L. I. Zon, Cell 132, 631 (2008).

      A review of the developmental origins of hematopoietic stem cells and the molecular mechanisms that regulate lineage-specific differentiation.

    9. A. M. Lichanska, D. A. Hume, Exp. Hematol. 28, 601 (2000). 

      In this review of the studies on the origins, phenotype, and function of embryonic phagocytes the authors conclude that yolk sac–derived macrophages constitute a separate lineage.

    10. K. Liu et al., Nat. Immunol. 8, 578 (2007). 

      This study showed that limited recruitment of cells by the recipient in parabiotic models can be attributed to a short half-life of the donor-derived cells in the blood.

    11. A. Mildner et al., Nat. Neurosci. 10, 1544 (2007). 

      In this study the authors identified a unique population of peripheral Ly-6C(hi)CCR2(+) monocytes, which are preferentially recruited into the lesioned brain following irradiation.

    12. B. Ajami, J. L. Bennett, C. Krieger, W. Tetzlaff, F. M. Rossi, Nat. Neurosci. 10, 1538 (2007). 

      Using parabiosis and irradiation in an experimental autoimmune encephalitis mouse model of multiple sclerosis, the authors found that peripheral monocytes infiltrate the brain and contribute to the progression of the disease but do not contribute to the pool of resident microglial cells.

    13. L. J. Lawson, V. H. Perry, S. Gordon, Neuroscience 48, 405 (1992). 

      Yet another early study supporting the hypothesis of microglial turnover via division and recruitment of peripheral monocytes into the brain parenchyma in the absence of the overt blood-brain barrier disruption.

    14. E. A. Ling, J. Anat. 128, 847 (1979). 

      One of the earlier studies of microglial origin, supporting their monocytic origin.

    15. R. M. Ransohoff, V. H. Perry, Annu. Rev. Immunol. 27, 119 (2009). 

      This is a comprehensive review of the ontogeny and functions of microglial cells.

    1. M. Sinha et al., Science 344, 649–652 (2014).

      Similar to this study, which showed that a young systemic factor could improve neurogenesis in old mice, Sinha et al. 2014 tested the same concept in muscle.

      Exposure of GDF-11 in old mice led to improved muscle structure, restored genomic integrity in adult muscle stem cells, increased strength, and increased capacity for exercise.

    2. C. L. Grady et al., Neuroimage 8, 409–425 (1998).

      This study, conducted in 1999, was one of the first to study the effects of age on brain networks. At the time, little was known about the relationship between age and brain mechanisms of changes in memory.

      This study showed that age is related to changes in verbal memory, and not picture memory.

    3. L. Katsimpardi et al., Stem Cells 26, 1796–1807 (2008).

      Neurogenesis is restricted to two main areas of the brain (subventricular zone and dentate gyrus) by precursor cell proliferation and differentiation. BM88/Cend1 is a neuronal lineage specific regulator. In this study, Katsimpardi et al. studied the effects of this regulator in postnatal neurogenesis.

      They found that BM88 is important for cell cycle control and neuronal differentiation in the neonatal subventricular zone, in the transition from neuroblast to mature neurons in mouse brains.

    4. J. Luo, S. B. Daniels, J. B. Lennington, R. Q. Notti, J. C. Conover, Aging Cell 5, 139–152 (2006).

      Here, the authors study the subventricular zone (SVZ) to investigate the decline in neurogenesis during aging. By conducting electron microscopy imaging, and labeling cells, they examine the cytoarchitecture of the SVZ.

      They found a specific dorsolateral aspect of the SVZ, which retains features of a neurogenic stem cell niche in elderly mice.

    5. S. A. Villeda et al., Nature 477, 90–94 (2011).

      This study shows the effects of systemic factors on the decline of age-related neurogenesis. They found that chemokines CCL1/Eotaxin is present in aging mice, and is associated with reduced neurogenesis. Similar to this Katsimpardi et al. study, increasing the levels of the blood-borne factor CCL1 in young mice led to decreased neurogenesis and impaired learning and memory.

    6. H. van Praag, G. Kempermann, F. H. Gage, Nat. Neurosci. 2, 266–270 (1999).

      Exposure to an enriched environment increases neurogenesis in adult mice. Examples of enriched environments include larger housing, voluntary exercise, social interactions, and learning opportunities. Enhanced neurogenesis in enriched environments is also linked to improved spatial memory capabilities.

      This study shows that voluntary exercise alone can improve enhanced neurogenesis in adult mice.

    7. Q. Shen et al., Science 304, 1338–1340 (2004).

      Here, endothelial cells were identified as critical components of the neural stem cell niche.

      Factors derived from endothelial cells promote neural stem cell self-renewal and promotes neurogenesis.

    8. F. S. Loffredo et al., Cell 153, 828–839 (2013).

      Reference 13 describes a study similar to the one described in this paper, where heterochronic parabiotic mouse pairs were generated between young and old mice, to discover a reversal in the process of age-related cardiac hypertrophy.

      In this study, they observed a dramatic reduction in cardiac hypertrophy in old mice, due to being exposed to a blood-borne factor in young mice. In order to identify the special systemic factor, they profiled the proteome of young mice, and found that GDF11 declines with age, and exposure to GDF11 in old mice restored age-related cardiac hypertrophy.

    9. J. S. Snyder, A. Soumier, M. Brewer, J. Pickel, H. A. Cameron, Nature 476, 458 (2011).

      Reference 6 studies the effects of stress and anxiety on neurogenesis.

      Here, they found that a small subset of neurons in the dentate gyrus, which is responsible for the negative control of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Elevation of stress hormones and anxiety are correlated with decreased neurogenesis.

  11. May 2016
    1. X. Zheng et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 125001 (2012)

      This article reports the design of the high-resolution projection microstereolithography technique used by the authors.

      This technique is used in the present article to manufacture the different cellular solids (see Fig.2 A).

    2. W. Y. Jang, S. Kyriakides, A. M. Kraynik, Int. J. Solids Struct. 47, 2872–2883 (2010).

      The authors of this article investigated the compressive behavior of a random cell structure, a metallic foam.

      This structure was also manufactured by the authors of the present article and served for comparison purposes against the new ultralight and ultrastiff structures.

    3. J. D. Renton, Elastic Beams and Frames (Horwood, Chichester, UK, ed. 2, 2002).

      This book presents the basic theory and tools needed to study the behavior of elastic structures.

    4. V. S. Deshpande, N. A. Fleck, M. F. Ashby, J. Mech. Phys. Solids 49, 1747–1769 (2001).

      The goal of this article is to analyze the properties of the octet-truss unit cell using mechanical theory, simulations, and experiments.

      The octet-truss unit cell is the basic building block chosen by the authors of the present article to design their ultralight and ultrastiff materials.

    5. D. Rayneau-Kirkhope, Y. Mao, R. Farr, Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 204301 (2012).

      In this article, the authors explain the process of manufacturing an ultralight fractal structure to obtain either hollow or solid objects. The potential applications are described.

    6. J. K. Cochran, K. J. Lee, D. McDowell, T. Sanders, Multifunctional metallic honeycombs by thermal chemical processing. In Processsing and Properties of Lightweight Cellular Metals and Structures, A. K. Ghosh, T. H. Sanders, T. D. Claar, Eds. (Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, Seattle, WA, 2002), p. 127–136.

      This chapter of a book describes the processing and the properties of a specific cellular class of solids: the metallic honeycombs.

    7. L. J. Gibson, MRS Bull. 28, 270–274 (2003).

      This text reviews the contents of a special issue of the MRS bulletin, dedicated to cellular solids.

    8. S. O. Kucheyev et al., Adv. Mater. 24, 776–780 (2012).

      This article describes the behavior of nanoporous silica aerogels: these objects are super compressible for ultralow densities.

    9. T. A. Schaedler et al., Science 334, 962–965 (2011)

      In this article, the authors have fabricated ultralight metallic microlattices and have performed mechanical testing on these objects.

      The elasticity of this material is proportional to the square of the density.

      Hence, the linear law desired by the authors of the present paper is not reached in this article.

    10. J. L. Gibson, F. M. Ashby, Cellular Solids: Structure and Properties (Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2001).

      This book about cellular solids summarizes the theory needed to understand the structural properties and the mechanical behavior of cellular solids.

      The applications of these kinds of materials are also reviewed.

    11. S. Baudis et al., Biomed. Mater. 6, 055003 (2011).

      In this article, the authors report the design of a new biocompatible material in the vascular tissue engineering field.

    12. O. Y. Kwon, H. J. Ryu, S. Y. Jeong, J. Ind. Eng. Chem. 12, 306 (2006).

      This article describes the use of carbon microlattices as a catalyst support for chemistry applications.

    13. L. Valdevit, A. Pantano, H. A. Stone, A. G. Evans, Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer 49, 3819–3830 (2006).

      This article presents the optimization process in the design of metallic sandwiches for active cooling applications.

    14. T. A. Schaedler et al., Adv. Eng. Mater. 16, 276–283 (2014).

      This article describes the design of metallic microlattices for energy-absorbing applications.

    15. L. Valdevit, A. J. Jacobsen, J. R. Greer, W. B. Carter, J. Am. Ceram. Soc. 94, s15–s34 (2011).

      This article is a review of the manufacturing techniques available to produce microarchitectured materials.

      The conclusion of the review is that the technology is mature for the development, characterization, and optimal design of a novel class of multifunctional materials with the potential to achieve unprecedented combination of properties.

    1. S. R. Clark et al., Nat. Med. 13, 463–469 (2007).

      This paper details the process of how neutrophils, with the help of platelets, are able to trap bacteria in the blood and play an important role in controlling sepsis.

    2. J. J. Miner et al., Blood 112, 2035–2045 (2008).

      In this study, the deltaCD knock-in mice were prepared, whereas the cytoplamsic domain (CD) of PSGL-1 is removed.

    3. K. Szczur, Y. Zheng, M. D. Filippi, Blood 114, 4527–4537 (2009).

      In this paper, the authors show that neutrophils deficient in Cdc42 cannot maintain polarity (distinct leading edge and uropod).

    4. J. W. Semple, J. E. Italiano Jr., J. Freedman, Nat. Rev. Immunol. 11, 264–274 (2011).

      This is a review of the immune functions of platelets, the underdog cell type for most immunologists, This review highlights the essential roles platelets play in several immune functions.

    1. Introduction to Ecological Biochemistry

      An introductory textbook to the subject of "ecological biochemistry." This science is the study of the biochemistry of interactions between animals, plants and the environment, including the effect of plant toxins on animals.

    2. Revealing the paradox of drug reward in human evolution

      It is generally believe that drug abuse is the result of triggering reward systems in the brain. However, the most commonly used drugs are plant neurotoxins that evolved to deter herbivores from eating the plants, not reward them for it. How do we explain this contradiction?

      This paper outlines a few theories to explain this paradox, including the idea that humans may have evolved mechanisms to exploit these plant defenses.

    3. Effects of aging on acute toxicity of nicotine in rats.

      This and the publications listed immediately above and below it are meant to serve as evidence that while caffeine can be a stimulant and have positive effects, it is lethal when ingested at very high doses.

      This study showed that high doses of nicotine was lethal and caused convulsions in rats regardless of age. However, the older the rat was, the longer it took for the nicotine to be lethal. The older rats also had reduced neurobiological responses to the nicotine.

      The authors hypothesized that these effects reflected the older rats' reduced brain sensitivity to nicotine and decreased ability to metabolize nicotine in the liver.

    4. Pest control: Caffeine as a repellent for slugs and snails.

      This study published as a Nature Brief Communication showed that caffeine at high doses is lethal to slugs and snails.

      This and the two publications listed below it are meant to serve as evidence that while caffeine can be a stimulant and have positive effects, it is lethal when ingested at very high doses.

      This study has an important real-world application - as caffeine is a product that is already classified as "GRAS" (Generally Recognized as Safe) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, these results suggest caffeine has potential to be used as a safe alternative to some pesticides used on farm crops.

    5. Are we dependent upon coffee and caffeine? A review on human and animal data.

      This paper reviews available data on caffeine dependence, tolerance, reinforcement and withdrawal, including the effects of all of the above on humans and animals.

      It is referred to in this paper to support the idea that low doses of caffeine are mildly rewarding and enhance cognitive performance and memory retention.

    6. A case of fatal caffeine poisoning

      This and the two publications listed above it are meant to serve as evidence that while caffeine can be a stimulant and have positive effects, it is lethal when ingested at very high doses.

      This paper describes the case of a 21-year-old woman who ingested 10,000 mg of caffeine (and incredibly high dose). The woman went into cardiac arrest, and though she was resuscitated, she died in the hospital three days later.

    7. Tropical Agriculture: The value of bees to the coffee harvest.

      This paper counters the previously-held belief that the self-pollinating Coffea arabica plant did not benefit from insect pollinators. It shows that honeybees not only help with pollination, but also ultimately boost crop yields by over 50%.

    8. Economic value of tropical forest to coffee production

      This paper, as its title suggests, outlines an argument for the economic value of tropical forests to coffee production (and so argues against deforestation.) It is cited here to support the claim that plants of the genera Citrus and Coffea produce more fruits and seeds when pollinated by bees.

    9. Materials and methods are available in the supplementary materials in Science Online

      Found here

    10. M. E. Bitterman, R. Menzel, A. Fietz, S. Schafer

      This paper describes the experimental procedure behind the classical conditioning of proboscis extension in honeybees. It appears to be the first paper to do so, indicating its authors first established this protocol.

    11. Caffeine-induced synaptic potentiation in hippocampal CA2 neurons

      This paper shows that caffeine inhibits adenosine receptors and induces long-term potentiation of neurons in the hippocampus. This long-term potentiation of hippocampal neurons is critical for memory formation.

    12. Mushroom body memoir: From maps to models.

      This review discusses insect mushroom bodies. It is cited here as it discusses the evidence that mushroom bodies in insect brains participate in olfactory memory.

    13. Long-term synaptic plasticity in the honeybee.

      This paper describes the first demonstration of long-term synaptic plasticity in the honeybee brain. It is cited to show the long-term potentiation in insect neurons that is associated with memory formation.

    14. Selective impairment of learning and blockade of long-term potentiation by an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, AP5

      This paper showed that blocking long-term potentiation of hippocampal neurons interferes with learning and memory formation.

    15. Phytochemistry

      This paper found that there were significant amounts of caffeine in the pollen and nectar of citrus flowers. They further found that the presence of caffeine and other alkaloids was linked to the time during which the flowers were in full bloom (i.e., when a honeybee would be interested in them.)

    16. Evolution, discovery, and interpretations of arthropod mushroom bodies

      This paper is an overview of the history of research on mushroom bodies. Included in this overview is a discussion of the data showing that insect mushroom bodies are associated with olfactory learning.

    17. The role of extracellular adenosine in chemical neurotransmission in the hippocampus and basal ganglia: Pharmacological and clinical aspects

      This paper is cited here as it shows that caffeine can block A1 receptors (a presynaptic adenosine receptor in the brain).