Thursday, February 28, 2013

Same Genetic Basis Found in 5 Types of Mental Disorders

from nytimes.com





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The psychiatric illnesses seem very different — schizophreniabipolar disorderautismmajor depression and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Yet they share several genetic glitches that can nudge the brain along a path to mental illness, researchers report. Which disease, if any, develops is thought to depend on other genetic or environmental factors.
Mark Ostow for The New York Times
Steven McCarroll, of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the Broad Institute of Harvard and M.I.T., noted the significance of the study.

Related

Their study, published online Wednesday in the Lancet, was based on an examination of genetic data from more than 60,000 people worldwide. Its authors say it is the largest genetic study yet of psychiatric disorders. The findings strengthen an emerging view of mental illness that aims to make diagnoses based on the genetic aberrations underlying diseases instead of on the disease symptoms.
Two of the aberrations discovered in the new study were in genes used in a major signaling system in the brain, giving clues to processes that might go awry and suggestions of how to treat the diseases.
“What we identified here is probably just the tip of an iceberg,” said Dr. Jordan Smoller, lead author of the paper and a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. “As these studies grow we expect to find additional genes that might overlap.”
The new study does not mean that the genetics of psychiatric disorders are simple. Researchers say there seem to be hundreds of genes involved and the gene variations discovered in the new study confer only a small risk of psychiatric disease.
Steven McCarroll, director of genetics for the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the Broad Institute of Harvard and M.I.T., said it was significant that the researchers had found common genetic factors that pointed to a specific signaling system.
“It is very important that these were not just random hits on the dartboard of the genome,” said Dr. McCarroll, who was not involved in the new study.
The work began in 2007 when a large group of researchers began investigating genetic data generated by studies in 19 countries and including 33,332 people with psychiatric illnesses and 27,888 people free of the illnesses for comparison. The researchers studied scans of people’s DNA, looking for variations in any of several million places along the long stretch of genetic material containing three billion DNA letters. The question: Did people with psychiatric illnesses tend to have a distinctive DNA pattern in any of those locations?
Researchers had already seen some clues of overlapping genetic effects in identical twins. One twin might have schizophrenia while the other had bipolar disorder. About six years ago, around the time the new study began, researchers had examined the genes of a few rare families in which psychiatric disorders seemed especially prevalent. They found a few unusual disruptions of chromosomes that were linked to psychiatric illnesses. But what surprised them was that while one person with the aberration might get one disorder, a relative with the same mutation got a different one.
Jonathan Sebat, chief of the Beyster Center for Molecular Genomics of Neuropsychiatric Diseases at the University of California, San Diego, and one of the discoverers of this effect, said that work on these rare genetic aberrations had opened his eyes. “Two different diagnoses can have the same genetic risk factor,” he said.
In fact, the new paper reports, distinguishing psychiatric diseases by their symptoms has long been difficult. Autism, for example, was once called childhood schizophrenia. It was not until the 1970s that autism was distinguished as a separate disorder.
But Dr. Sebat, who did not work on the new study, said that until now it was not clear whether the rare families he and others had studied were an exception or whether they were pointing to a rule about multiple disorders arising from a single genetic glitch.
“No one had systematically looked at the common variations,” in DNA, he said. “We didn’t know if this was particularly true for rare mutations or if it would be true for all genetic risk.” The new study, he said, “shows all genetic risk is of this nature.”
The new study found four DNA regions that conferred a small risk of psychiatric disorders. For two of them, it is not clear what genes are involved or what they do, Dr. Smoller said. The other two, though, involve genes that are part of calcium channels, which are used when neurons send signals in the brain.
“The calcium channel findings suggest that perhaps — and this is a big if — treatments to affect calcium channel functioning might have effects across a range of disorders,” Dr. Smoller said.
There are drugs on the market that block calcium channels — they are used to treat high blood pressure — and researchers had already postulated that they might be useful for bipolar disorder even before the current findings.
One investigator, Dr. Roy Perlis of Massachusetts General Hospital, just completed a small study of a calcium channel blocker in 10 people with bipolar disorder and is about to expand it to a large randomized clinical trial. He also wants to study the drug in people with schizophrenia, in light of the new findings. He cautions, though, that people should not rush out to take a calcium channel blocker on their own.
“We need to be sure it is safe and we need to be sure it works,” Dr. Perlis said.





Monday, February 25, 2013

Consciousness (or the lack thereof) in political thought


from americablog.com
We all consider ourselves rational beings.
Our thoughts and decisions seem to be based on a logical deduction that allows us to derive good from bad, and right from wrong.
Because of this, we often find that when we come across someone who disagrees with us, especially on political issues, they aren’t just wrong; something about the way they are thinking must be off, or at least different, compared to ours.
Evidence from outside of political science is beginning to show that this is exactly the case, but not because we are rational or conscious in our line of thinking. In fact, it is due to our unconscious minds that these political differences occur.From twin studies to research on unconscious priming, factors outside of our control and attention have an overwhelming level of influence on the way we deliberate, argue and vote.
This idea isn’t particularly new for areas outside of politics. Unconscious drives for food, sleep and sex are the reason we, despite our better judgement, can’t stop ourselves from eating the last cookie, hitting the snooze button in the morning or drunk-dialing our ex on the weekend.
We assume that because politics is somehow elevated in our cognitive framework, a higher pursuit than pizza or pornography, it is immune from these same base drives. But, no matter how highbrow or lowbrow, thought is thought; the same unconscious drives that apply to survival, apply to political debate.
Consciousness via Shutterstock
Consciousness via Shutterstock
This makes sense in terms of evolutionary biology. The conscious and sub-conscious portions of our minds are not only independent, but also evolved at different times.
The parts of our brain that make sure we survive long enough to reproduce (e.g., heartbeat, breathing, drives for food, sex, sleep) and react to the external world (e.g., reflexes, interpretation of auditory/visual cues) were present long before consciousness developed. Since our non-conscious brains were surviving on their own, conscious thought evolved not to control our non-conscious minds, but rather to increase human beings’ chances for survival by more efficiently directing their non-conscious drives.
Human evolution doesn’t start from scratch, it builds on what is already present. Our sub-conscious minds have remained dominant over our conscious minds because the neocortex and other brain structures that are responsible for conscious evaluation evolved as a new extension of the brain, not as an integrated mechanism.
Our conscious minds can guide our thought, but are still beholden to the same non-conscious drives that have dominated behavior since eons before humans existed.
Over the next few weeks, I’ll be running a series of posts outlining evidence in the fields of biology, neuroscience,psychology, economics and political science which shows that we tend to give ourselves too much credit when taking stock of our objectivity, deliberative ability and control over our end-game decision making.
New knowledge of the lack of consciousness in political thought could change the way you look at yourself and, perhaps just as importantly, the way you look at those you disagree with.

Jon Green is a junior Political Science major and Public Policy concentrator at Kenyon College. He is also the co-editor in chief of the Kenyon Observer, the school's student-run political journal. Jon worked as a field organizer for Tom Perriello in 2010 and recently returned to AMERICAblog from the Obama campaign, where he was a Deputy Regional Field Director based in Hampton, Virginia. He writes on a variety of topics but pays particularly close attention to elections, political psychology and the use of social media. Jon on Google+, and his .

Saturday, February 23, 2013

IndiaTimes: Our average level of consciousness is a 'stone'

from indiatimes.com


It might “hurt” itself by chipping or breaking up. This pain or injury could be similar if an individual hits another.
It might “hurt” itself by chipping or breaking up. This pain or injury could be similar if an individual hits another.
Tejinder Narang

If we seriously introspect, our average level of consciousness is no better than that of a stone, which remains unaware of its self, origin, objective of life, final destination and macrocosmic surroundings.

Mystics call us ignorant or blind or fools surviving in darkness. As an allegorical indication, we generally live life in "stone consciousness", though with the potential of elevating it to the highest level or pushing it down, by incarnating into lower species. When flung, a stone can "hurt" others. It might "hurt" itself by chipping or breaking up. This pain or injury could be similar if an individual hits another. There could be mental anguish if one flings unpleasant words at others.

A boulder is also harmless if left alone. Thus, stone/chips/rocks carry attributes of energy similar to those of living beings. From a higher perspective, the concept of non-living is hypothetical. The whole Existence is "living" and "breathing" with the power and purpose that may not be comprehensible. Should man claim his scientific attainments for superiority in consciousness? No.

All technological advancements are "conditioned" by the five elements of Nature. If these forces alter any time — all innovations would go or have to be reinvented! Likewise, scientists can write volumes about metamorphism of stones and particles/forces of cohesiveness, mass, effect of gravity, etc. Thus, a stone can also be classified as complex scientific machinery or entity.

The soil/rock we stand on bears our burden while living and covers us in death. Thus, it is unfair to belittle so-called non-living entities or lower species or individuals, for we are no better in our usual state of "stone consciousness", in cosmic hierarchy.

Friday, February 22, 2013

Consciousness Calendar Feb. 21 to March 7

from modertimesmagazine.com



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By Staff Report
Modern Times Magazine

Feb. 21, 2013 — The ASU Global Institute of Sustainability will host, “Keystone XL Pipeline: A Line In The Sand” from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Feb. 22 in Wrigley Hall, room 101 on the Tempe campus.

The Keystone XL Pipeline is a large-scale project proposed to transport oil from Canada's tar sands to the Texas coast along the Gulf of Mexico. Supporters claim the project will boost energy security, while opponents argue the potential danger to water supplies and other ecological factors make the risk not worth the potential benefits.

The panel discussion will feature Wally Broecker, “the grandfather of climate science"; Peter Byck, director of Carbon Nation; John Hofmeister, former president of Shell Oil; and ASU geographer Mike Pasqualetti. 

For more information and to RSVP, visithttp://sustainability.asu.edu/events/

Thursday, Feb. 21
Jeffrey M. Smith, author of Seeds of Deception, creator of the new documentary, Genetic Roulette: The Gamble of Our Lives, and an anti-GMO food advocate, will speak at the Shadow Rock Mountain Campus, 12861 N. 8th Ave., Phoenix, at 6:30 p.m. This event is sponsored by ASU’s Global Institute on Sustainability, and co-sponsored by GMO Free Arizona, The Urban Farm, Changing Hands Bookstore, and The Institute for Responsible Technology. This event is hosted in partnership with The FUSION Foundation and Shadow Rock United Church of Christ. To RSVP, email tosustainabilityevents@asu.edu. For more information, visithttp://www.facebook.com/events/149485525206326/ orhttp://sustainability.asu.edu/events/rsvp/jeffrey-smith

U.S. Rep. David Schweikert will speak to students beginning at 2 p.m. at Glendale Community College, in the GCC Student Union room 104. The event is hosted by the student club GCC Young Americans for Liberty, and will primarily focus on economic issues. For more information, visit http://www.GlendaleYAL.com, or email Gage Skidmore at gtskidmore@hotmail.com

Living United For Change In Arizona, or LUCHA, will host an organizing meeting from 6 to 8 p.m. at the LUCHA office, 3120 N. 19th Ave., suite 190, Phoenix. The group seeks an end to discrimination and immigrant reform. For more information, visit http://www.facebook.com/events/429507810467918/ orhttp://www.luchaaz.org/

Friday, Feb. 22
The 12th Local to Global Teach In will be held from Feb. 22 to 24 at Arizona State University, Tempe. The theme is “Justice for Women/Justice for All,” and will include panels and plenary sessions as well as hands-on exhibits of permaculture gardening and other skill shares, engaging activities and workshops for children and youth, and tabling from over 40 campus and community groups. For more information, visit http://www.localtoglobal.org/2013.html

The Arizona State University Global Institute of Sustainability will hold a workshop, “Solar Energy: Social and Ethical Consequences,” from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the Farmer Building, room 250, Tempe. For more information, visithttp://sustainability.asu.edu/events/

The ASU Global Institute of Sustainability will host, “Keystone XL Pipeline: A Line In The Sand” from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in Wrigley Hall, room 101 on the Tempe campus. The panel discussion features Wally Broecker, “the grandfather of climate science"; Peter Byck, director of Carbon Nation; John Hofmeister, former president of Shell Oil; and ASU geographer Mike Pasqualetti. For more information and to RSVP, visit http://sustainability.asu.edu/events/

Saturday, Feb. 23
Promise Arizona in collaboration with Maryvale High School will present a deferred action clinic will be held from 9 to 10:30 a.m. at Maryvale High School 3415 N. 59th Ave., Phoenix. For more information, visithttp://www.facebook.com/events/409140672494167/

The tea party and others are holding another Second Amendment rally at 11:45 a.m. at the Arizona State Capitol, 1700 W. Washington Street, Phoenix.This rally has been termed the .223 rally because the date coincides with the familiar ammunition and gun type. For more information, visithttp://phoenixteaparty.ning.com/events/day-of-resistance-223-2nd-amendment-rally

A protest decrying Bradley Manning’s 1,000 day in prison will be held from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. at Mill Ave., and University Drive. For more information, visithttp://www.facebook.com/events/530060690358820/

The American Academy for Constitutional Education and the local tea party will hold a town hall from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Scottsdale Plaza Resort, 7200 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale. The free event will attempt to explain the Constitution and why the document is moldable and adaptable to any time or circumstance. For more information, visit http://www.aafce.com/

The 31 annual Reid Park Peace Fair and Music Festival will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Events will be centered around the bandshell near 22nd Street and Country Club Road, featuring the music of Earth Spirit, Juan de Bisbee, Baba Marimba, Tucson’s Raging Grannies, Chet Gardiner, and other Tucson-area talent. Admission is free. For more information, visithttps://www.facebook.com/TucsonPeaceCenter, e-mail to mdecamp@q.com, visitwww.peacecalendar.org, or call 520-250-9832.

Monday, Feb. 25
The East Valley Transition will host their sixth semi-annual seed swap from 6 to 7:45 p.m. at the Chandler Sunset Library’s Monsoon Room, 4930 W. Ray Road, Chandler. Seeds will be available to all, even those who do not bring any, according to organizers. For more information, visithttp://www.facebook.com/events/471130792950557/

Gail Collins of the New York Times will present "When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to the Present" at 7 p.m. in the School of Social Transformation, Armstrong Hall Room 105, Tempe. For more information visit http://eventful.com/tempe/events/john-p-frank-lecture-gail-collins-ny-times-columnist-/E0-001-048198391-2

ASU’s Center for the Study of Religion and Conflict will host Gregg Zachary as he presents “The Transhumanist Imagination/Vannevar Bush, the Endless Frontier, and Human Enhancement,” from noon to 1:15 p.m. at West Hall, room 135, Tempe. For more information, visithttp://csrc.asu.edu/programs/conversations-center/transhumanist-imaginationvannevar-bush-endless-frontier-and-human-enha
Tuesday, Feb. 26
The 2013 International UFO Congress & Film Festival will begin at 10 a.m. at Radisson Fort McDowell Resort, North McDowell Mountain Park Drive, Scottsdale and continue through Sunday, March 3. Half day passes to full event passes are available, ranging from $25 to $229. For more information, visithttp://ufocongress.com/ufo-conference/schedule/

ASU’s Global Institute of Sustainability will present, “Confronting Our Carbon Emergency,” from noon to 1:30 p.m. in Wrigley Hall room 481 on the Tempe campus, presented by Wally Broecker, considered the “grandfather of climate science.” For more information and to register, visithttp://sustainability.asu.edu/events/

Wednesday, Feb. 27
Nils Ferrand, senior researcher of the French National Institute for Science and Technology for Environment and Agriculture will present, “Let Them Plan and Play: Autonomous African Resource Management,” from noon to 1:30 p.m. at Wrigley Hall, room 481, Arizona State University, Tempe. For more information, visit http://sustainability.asu.edu/events/sustainability-series.

Thursday, Feb. 28
The Arizona Clean Elections Commission will hold a meeting from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. at the CCEC Conference Room, 1616 W. Adams, suite 110, Phoenix.For more information, visit http://azcleanelections.gov/calendar/commission-meetings/upcoming.aspx

ASU’s Global Institute of Sustainability will present the film, Bidder 70, a documentary chronicling Tim DeChristopher and his ecological battle against big oil and the U.S. government at 6:30 p.m. in the Valley Art Theater, 509 S. Mill Ave., Tempe. For more information, visit http://sustainability.asu.edu/events/

Friday, March 1
WESTMARC is hosting Michael Crow, president of Arizona State University, for a discussion about the education and economic future of the West Valley of the Phoenix metro at 7:30 a.m., Randall McDaniel Sports Complex, American Sports Center, 755 N. 114th Ave., Avondale. RSVP to events@westmarc.org or call 623-435-0431.

Take Back the Night, an event designed to mitigate sexual and domestic violence will begin at 5:30 p.m. in Civic Space Park, 424 N. Central Ave., Phoenix. For more information, visithttp://www.facebook.com/events/481403005253709/

Saturday, March 2
Arizona List: A Committee for Pro-Choice Democratic Women in Arizona Supporting Progressive Women With Progressive Agendas will hold its annual events in Tucson and Phoenix, featuring Sandra Fluke. Tickets are $60 to $100. For more information, visithttp://www.arizonalist.org/

Sunday, March 3
TASER International’s Technical Summit 2013, “Building Public Trust with Digital Evidence: Why Later is Now” will be held from March 3 to 5 at the Westin Kierland Resort, 6902 E. Greenway Parkway, Scottsdale. The featured speaker will be Chris Burbank, Chief of Police at the Salt Lake City Police Department. To register, visit http://eventful.com/scottsdale/events/building-public-trust-digital-evidence-why-later-/E0-001-051425055-4

Wednesday, March 6
ASU’s Barrett Honors College is presenting a lecture by movie theater owner Dan Harkins at his Valley Art Theater, 509 S. Mill Ave., Tempe beginning at 4:30 p.m. For more information and to register, visit http://barretthonors.asu.edu/news-events/calendar/

The Rock ‘n Roe benefit concert for Planned Parenthood will begin at 8 p.m. at the Crescent Ballroom, 308 N. Second Ave., Phoenix. Performers will include A Silent Film, Gold Fields, and Royal Teeth. Tickets are $20 in advance, $25 at the door. To purchase tickets visit http://www.ticketfly.com/event/210349-silent-film-gold-fields-phoenix/

Thursday, March 7
The 2013 National Pastors & Leaders Healing Conference will be held from March 7 to 9 at the Without Walls Christian Center, 2542 W. Warner Road Chandler. For more information, visit http://eventful.com/phoenix_az/events/2013-national-pastors-le-/E0-001-051345298-8@2013030719

Thursday, February 21, 2013

What Does it Mean to Be Human?

from care2.com


What Does it Mean to Be Human?

What Does it Mean to Be Human?
Once—millions of years ago—oxygen was a poisonous gas produced by the first bacterial life on Earth. It became concentrated in the atmosphere and threatened to suffocate the tender life below. You might call it the first gigantic environmental crisis. Salvation came through the development of organisms that took in that oxygen and started “breathing”—organisms that lived on oxygen. We owe our existence to an unprecedented environmental disaster.
These examples of advances in civilization blooming from decay and defeat are everywhere. When hunting and gathering became unwieldy for the growing population, agriculture was born. Harvesting crops made it possible for people to settle in one place. The industrialization of the past century was an answer to the social constriction of the feudal agrarian society organized around small villages with a great deal of social control. The rise of industry brought with it the free life of the city. With the Industrial Revolution came human rights, democracy and even the welfare state, but since then material progress has run aground in social alienation. At the same time, consumer society is suffocating in worldwide pollution. Thus the same industrialization that once offered an innovative breakthrough for society is creating more problems than it solves. It is hard to imagine that more technology, better iPads, provide an answer to this systemic problem.
It is more likely that Albert Einstein will once again prove right: Problems cannot be solved at the same level at which they were created. Like the bacteria that transformed themselves into breathing organisms, life must develop to survive.
Perhaps environmental pollution, global warming and the painful gap between the rich and the poor do not constitute the major challenges of our civilization. Perhaps the real challenge lies in the way humankind meets the world—that is, in human consciousness. Consciousness is what makes us unique in the history of evolution. But we have yet to embrace fully what it means to be human.
Humanity stands at the threshold of a new era: the era of consciousness. After conquering the external world, we are ready to discover our inner selves.
Join Ervin Laszlo, Claire Zammit, Lynne McTaggart and others in a weekly discourse hosted by The Intelligent Optimist called The Consciousness Conversations, starting in March. To find out more, click here.


Read more:http://www.care2.com/greenliving/the-consciousness-conversations-3.html#ixzz2LYImb0nk