Found: Wingnuts’ Missing Brain Cells

So IOKIYAR is a medical condition now.

Damn. I know I’ve always said wingnuts were lacking something upstairs, but looks like Rachel Moraon and the other idiots just like her could have a physical excuse for theirr dreadful behaviour.

From the BBC:

‘Altruistic’ brain region found

Wingnut brain

The brain area was more active among the altruistic group

Scientists say they have found the part of the brain that predicts whether a person will be selfish or an altruist.

Altruism – the tendency to help others without obvious benefit to oneself – appears to be linked to an area called the posterior superior temporal sulcus.

Using brain scans, the US investigators found this region related to a person’s real-life unselfish behaviour.

The Duke University Medical Center study on 45 volunteers is published in Nature Neuroscience.

Selfless tendencies

The participants were asked to disclose how often they engaged in different helping behaviours, such as doing charity work, and were also asked to play a computer game designed to measure altruism.

The study authors say their work could have important implications.

They are now exploring ways to study the development of this brain region in early life and believe such information may help determine how altruistic tendencies are established.

Researcher Dr Scott Huettel explained: “Although understanding the function of this brain region may not necessarily identify what drives people like Mother Theresa, it may give clues to the origins of important social behaviours like altruism.”

[…]

Argh, why do bigots and shit-for-brainers always get a cop-out no matter how bad the things they do are?

Next thing you know IOKIYAR will be listed as medical condition, they’ll be claiming disability and soon they’ll raising money from Scaife and his cronies for lobby groups and thinktanks to agitate for in favour the altruism-impaired.

Bur wait! They already have one. My duh.

The US Army Trains More Than One Kind Of Killer

Acinetobacter baumannii

It’s not just gang culture the US army is exporting.

Wired News is reporting on the superbug that has evolved (but which was first blamed on the ‘dirty’ Iraqi soil) in Iraq military field hospitals and which has since been exported to hospitals all over Europe:

[…]

Since OPERATION Iraqi Freedom began in 2003, more than 700 US soldiers have been infected or colonized with Acinetobacter baumannii. A significant number of additional cases have been found in the Canadian and British armed forces, and among wounded Iraqi civilians. The Armed Forces Institute of Pathology has recorded seven deaths caused by the bacteria in US hospitals along the evacuation chain. Four were unlucky civilians who picked up the bug at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, DC, while undergoing treatment for other life-threatening conditions. Another was a 63-year-old woman, also chronically ill, who shared a ward at Landstuhl with infected coalition troops.

Behind the scenes, the spread of a pathogen that targets wounded GIs has triggered broad reforms in both combat medical care and the Pentagon’s networks for tracking bacterial threats within the ranks. Interviews with current and former military physicians, recent articles in medical journals, and internal reports reveal that the Department of Defense has been waging a secret war within the larger mission in Iraq and Afghanistan – a war against antibiotic-resistant pathogens.

Acinetobacter is only one of many bacterial nemeses prowling around in ICUs and neonatal units in hospitals all over the world. A particularly fierce organism known as MRSA – methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus – infects healthy people, spreads easily, and accounts for many of the 90,000 fatal infections picked up in US hospitals each year. Another drug-resistant germ on the rise in health care facilities, Clostridium difficile, moves in for the kill when long courses of antibiotics have wiped out normal intestinal flora.

Forerunners of the bug causing the military infections have been making deadly incursions into civilian hospitals for more than a decade. In the early 1990s, 1,400 people were infected or colonized at a single facility in Spain. A few years later, particularly virulent strains of the bacteria spread through three Israeli hospitals, killing half of the infected patients. Death by acinetobacter can take many forms: catastrophic fevers, pneumonia, meningitis, infections of the spine, and sepsis of the blood. Patients who survive face longer hospital stays, more surgery, and severe complications.

[…]

Until a few years ago, most strains could be dispatched with a wide variety of drugs. For the most tenacious infections, doctors could rely on a family of ultrabroad spectrum antibiotics called carbapenems. But strains of acinetobacter are emerging now that are immune to every known remedy. Multidrug – resistant pathogens are an epidemiologist’s nightmare – reminders of the dark ages when millions of people died every year of runaway infections.

[…]

And they’re spreading fast. A major outbreak in Chicago two years ago infected 81 patients, killing at least 14. Arizona health officials tracked more than 200 infections in state hospitals early last year. Doctors at Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Tennessee used to see an infection or two every year; now it’s one or more a month. “These bacteria are developing very, very quickly,” says CDC epidemiologist Arjun Srinivasan, who has been consulting with the DOD about the military outbreak. “The bad news is that we’re many years away from having new drugs to treat them. It should be a call to arms.”

Read on…

Sunday Breakfast Lunch Mixed Bag

A selection of interesting, silly and disturbing things to look at with your Sunday morning breakfast: afternoon repast:

Wow, so much we still don’t know.A new form of life has been found in Arctic waters. How many other of these unknown new forms have we already destroyed inadvertently?

How’s that democracy-spreadin’ goin’, guys? The FBI says laxity in recruiting means gangs are joining the military and may spread US gang culture worldwide. A bit late to be worrying about that surely?

How happy is your country? Check the World Happiness Map

Video: how the US Army is selling reenlistment to the troops in Iraq

“All you ever wanted or needed to know about kitten-huffing.

Health warning: mass kitten- huffing may be 'armful.

My first thought on reading this is oooh, ooh I want one – the pen that remembers what you’ve written:

I left CES with around 20 free pens. I went a little crazy with it. “Hmm, yes, that’s very interesting…eh, do you have any pens?” I’m thinking of starting a pen blog where every entry is scanned in after being written with the pen I’m talking about. People could send in their unusual pens from around the world for review. I’d call it “Pengadget.” One for a rainy day I suppose. The best pen I saw at the show was not for walking away with. The Wowpen Memo requires the user to clip a little device to the top of any sheet of paper of any size. The writer then does their thing, taking notes, sketching, whatever. Once done, the little clip device plugs into the USB port of your computer, where it transfers all your notes and other doodlings to your PC, ready to be viewed onscreen. I think it uses a technology called “magic.” You can even convert your notes to text providing you have handwriting recognition software.

But think what a boon to ‘law enforcement’ iit could be… perhaps not, then. Not that the innocent have anything to fear from the police. Heaven forbid.

The stairway to cat heaven.

Remember the orange Bavaria beer pants that all the cloggies were wearing at the World Cup? Wel, they continue to turn up in some unlikely places.

Scrappy Chinese manufacturer, Wang Ming, saw an opportunity where others saw a crisis and pressed the excess pants into service as props in a baffling looking board game named Smack The Lion.

I dread to think what the rules of that board game are. Oo-er, missus.

Eat your bacon or sausage sandwich before you read this.

The official hairstyle of the ’08 Presidential Election

China – what’s more important to the Chinese population, democracy or stabilty? ( h/t Blood & Treasure)

Video: an octopus in a maze

Whiter than white: the utra-brite of beetles.

Ultra-brite beetle

This Rather Puts Things In Perspective

Dark matter mapped in 3-D detail

Invisible web serves as scaffolding for ?ordinary? matter, scientists say

This illustration shows the three-dimensional distribution of dark matter in a patch of the universe, going back from a nearby region in recent time (on the left) to a distant region about 6.5 billion years ago (on the right). The chart indicates that the distribution of mass has become increasingly clumpy

[…]

The findings announced Sunday provided a “first glimpse of the cosmic web” in true-to-life, three-dimensional detail, said Caltech’s Richard Ellis, another member of the COSMOS team.

The lead author of the Nature paper, Caltech astronomer Richard Massey, said the COSMOS study provides the best confirmation that dark matter determines “the underlying structure of space.” Galaxies as well as primordial globs of gas and dust form “within this dark-matter scaffolding,” he said.

[…]

Even though the matter itself couldn’t be seen, astronomers detected its effect by analyzing the gravitational effect of that matter on light rays from more distant light sources. As light rays from faraway objects passed by, the unseen matter acted like a gravitational lens, bending and distorting those rays in characteristic ways.

Observations from other instruments, particularly the XMM-Newton space telescope, provided information about how far the light rays had traveled. The COSMIC team combined the data about the distortions with the data about the distances, then produced a 3-D map by building up separate layers. The process is similar to the way a 3-D map of the human body can be built up in a medical CT scan.

[…]

Full story

Read more: Science, Physics, Astronomy, Cosmology, Dark matter, Universe, Space, Maps

Socialism, Drugs and Matter Transformation

Images by Ghim Wei Ho, a Ph.D. student working for Professor Mark Welland, at the University of Cambridge Nanoscale Science Laboratory.

I’m not one for futurology or singularity watching; there are others much more qualified to do that. But I do read science fiction and a common trope is the matter transformer. Press a button on a small box and the desired product pops out, created as though from thin air. “Computer, I’ll have a latte please, and a choccie bikkie.”

If only.

So when I was browsing this morning’s Grauniad letters page and came across this letter about microfluidic chemical synthesisers and a miniature drug factory in every kitchen my first reaction was “You’re having a laugh, aren’t you?”

Many unmodified patented drugs cost tens of thousands of pounds per year per patient, and many have to be taken for years or for life. Patent law allows private individuals to make anything that is patented without paying a royalty, as long as they are making it for their own use and don’t sell it, or otherwise make a profit from it. Instead of prescribing expensive patented drugs, the NHS could give the patients a microfluidic chemical synthesiser capable of making the drug from its unpatented chemical precursors. Such synthesisers, if mass produced, would cost a few thousand pounds. They would be about the size of a microwave oven, sit in the patient’s kitchen, and each morning would have produced a phial of 5 millilitres of the drug for the patient to put in their orange juice. The NHS drugs bill is currently 6.6bn pound a year, about 13% of total NHS spending. Synthesisers could make a significant reduction in that figure.

Dr Adrian Bowyer Mechanical engineering department, University of Bath

As a kidney patient I’m a walking example of better living through chemistry so naturally something like this would have a huge impact. Really, a black-box drug factory in your kitchen? No more farting around with repeat prescriptions and constant trips to the lab or the pharmacy? Sign me up.

But – it can’t be possible, can it? And even if it were, imagine the actual logistics for organisations like the NHS – the distribution and maintenance of the machines, the constant re-supply of the necesssary raw materials to multiple patients with multiple drug needs, the inevitable cockups and scandals – it would be way beyond their current woeful management capability.

But the writer is an academic at a respectable university and not a crank (unlike some science academics I could mention), so a did a little googling, and Dr Bowyer’s description of this technology is no exaggeration.

Microfluidiic technology isn’t brand new – ‘labs-on-a-chip’ have been available for use in such areas as DNA analysis and genomics, clinical diagnostics, liquid chromatography and bio-defence sensors for quite some time. What’s interesting is the increasing useof microfluidic synthesisers in manufacturing – the implications are huge.

Granted it’s confined at present to creating medical chemicals (as the action is on a molecular scale the equipment’s components have yet to be tested on humans) but stories like this show that we’re on the brink of nanotechnology becoming an everyday reality and that we’ve hardly even noticed it happening.

This is from 2 years ago:

A miniature chemistry set the size of a penny looks set to deliver faster, cheaper imaging agents for positron emission tomography (PET) scans, which are used to see inside patients’ bodies.The microfluidic chip uses a tiny network of channels to shuttle chemicals around, and has valves and purification filters to perform a sequence of chemical steps. The result can produce a chemical that is crucial for PET scans much more quickly and with fewer reagents than a standard lab. This should make scans simpler and cheaper for hospitals.

Microreactors are not a new idea, and are increasingly being used in research laboratories. But many rely on a continuous flow of material from one end of a miniature pipe to the other, without valves and filters. These continuous flow reactors are plagued by cross-contamination of reagents from different chemical steps, says Hsian-Rong Tseng, a pharmacologist at the University of California, Los Angeles, and part of the team that developed the device. This is a significant barrier to using such chips to make pharmaceuticals or other complex chemicals, hesays.The valve-based chip is so versatile that it could become one of the first microreactors in widespread use outside the research lab,

[…]

Making these polymer chips is so simple that with the help of computer-aided design it can take just two days to create a chip to run a particular sequence of chemical reactions, and the average cost is just $10 apiece, says Tseng.

Not only that, but the machinery that makes the chips may soon be able to replicate itself too.

Bowyer leads the RipRap project, a printer that’s able to fabricate three-dimensional artifacts from a computer-based model and which has recently sucessfully self-replicated one of its own components. And what’s best is that Bowyer is a Darwinian Marxist and his own work is all Open Source .

We’re not at the point of the kitchen drug machine yet, but getting there. Imagine the implications when we are – patients and healthcare-providers alike could become liberated from the predations of the global multinational pharmaceutical companies. No wonder those companies’re already angling for a way to make money from this technology.

Quietly a battle for the future of manufacturing is underway: if the multinational biotechnology firms can gain a stranglehold on novel applications of nanotechnological developments then by the foreseeable future, by having manipulated patent law they’ll essentially control the means of production of much more than just pharmaceuticals and test-kits.

So even more well done Dr Bowyer for making his own work Open Source, when you consider the profits he could be making.

But one important question still remains unanswered: can it make tea yet?

Read more: Science, Nanotechnology, Pharmaceuticals, Microfluidic chemical synthesizers, Marxism, Darwinism , Open source, Singularity