Tag Archives: Google - Page 27

A chimp and an orangutan show how they use something of a cross between a crawl and…

A chimp and an orangutan show how they use something of a cross between a crawl and a breast stroke whilst swimming.

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A thinker sees his own actions as experiments & questions – as attempts to find…

A thinker sees his own actions as experiments & questions – as attempts to find out something. Success and failure are for him answers above all.

–Friedrich Nietzsche, The Happy Science #41

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Kind of gross-lookin' for being the "best-looking laboratory-grown ear …

Kind of gross-lookin' for being the "best-looking laboratory-grown ear yet".

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The Best-Looking Laboratory-Grown Ear Yet

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Some problems are so complex that you have to be highly intelligent and well informed…

Some problems are so complex that you have to be highly intelligent and well informed just to be undecided about them.

–Laurence J. Peter

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The problem, often not discovered until late in life, is that when you look for things…

The problem, often not discovered until late in life, is that when you look for things in life like love, meaning, motivation, it implies they are sitting behind a tree or under a rock. The most successful people in life recognize, that in life they create their own love, they manufacture their own meaning, they generate their own motivation. For me, I am driven by two main philosophies, know more today about the world than I knew yesterday. And lessen the suffering of others. You'd be surprised how far that gets you.

— Neil DeGrasse Tyson

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Zogg (who hails from Betelgeuse), explains the shape of the universe

Thanks, Zogg!

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Only a mouse brain, but still…

Only a mouse brain, but still…

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Neuroscientists plant false memories in the brain
The phenomenon of false memory has been well-documented: In many court cases, defendants have been found guilty based on testimony from witnesses and victims who were sure of their recollections, b…

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How to Build an Eye

Reshared post from +Buddhini Samarasinghe

How to Build an Eye

I came across a paper today with this fantastic image that I simply had to write about. Its another #OpenAccess paper, published in PLOS Biology (http://goo.gl/NmvA9). The image shows an eye from a human, mouse, zebrafish and a fruitfly. It also shows what happens when an important gene in eye development, pax6 is mutated. It's fascinating that despite all these differences between us and such a diverse range of species, we still share the same basic developmental pathways.

✤ The compound eye of a fruit fly is very different to our squidgy gelatinous eyeball. But the embryonic development of our eyes and the fruit fly eye are virtually identical. 

✤ In humans, a gene known as pax6 (in fruit flies it is known as eyeless) is a key player in eye development. As an aside, many Drosophila genes have interesting names because they were historically named after the visible effect of mutating that gene – see here for an old post of mine on funny fruit fly names (http://goo.gl/blIKBm).

✤ pax6 is known as a master control switch, and encodes a transcription factor which goes on to activate many other genes further downstream in the signaling pathway. Because it is crucial for eye development across so many different species, the amino acid sequence for pax6 is highly conserved across these species. For example, the mouse and human pax6 genes have identical amino acid sequences. Even more interestingly, mouse pax6 can trigger eye development in fruit flies. Finally, even though zebrafish and humans diverged over 400 million years ago, 96% of the amino acid sequence between the two genes are identical. 

✤ Injecting pax6 RNA into an early developing frog embryo results in the development of an ectopic eye (see #OpenAccess paper here: http://goo.gl/qFtvR2). 

✤ Given how important pax6 is for eye development, it comes as no surprise that things go drastically wrong if there are mutations in the pax6 gene. In the image below, the top row of images show healthy eyes from a human, mouse, zebrafish and a fruit fly. The bottom row have eyes that failed to develop correctly because of a mutant pax6 or eyeless gene. The human mutations in pax6 may result in aniridia (absence of iris), corneal opacity , cataract (lens clouding), glaucoma, and long-term retinal degeneration. For mouse, the mutants show extremely small eyes with lens/corneal opacity and iris abnormality, and there is a large plug of persistent epithelial cells that remains attached between the cornea and the lens. For zebrafish, the mutants show a decreased eye size, reduced lens size, and malformation of the retina. Drosophila mutations cause loss of eye development. 

✤ The developmental pathway activated by the master switch pax6 is very complex. Research in several labs is directed towards characterizing this complex network of regulatory genes. By studying this essential 'master switch' gene, we can gather important information about congentital defects in babies involving eye development.

Image from http://goo.gl/NmvA9

#ScienceEveryday   #EvoDevo  

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Sometimes when I see someone I know in public I act like I don't see them just…

Sometimes when I see someone I know in public I act like I don't see them just so I can avoid the social interaction.

I'm not socially disabled.  People like me, I can small talk with the best of them, etc…it's just that there's a cost in mental energy involved with greeting and making conversation and I often just don't want to pay that cost.

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Extraversion and introversion – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The trait of extraversion–introversion is a central dimension of human personality theories. The terms introversion and extraversion were first popularized by Carl Jung, although both the popular understanding and psychological usage differ from his original intent. Extraversion tends to be …

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