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Katie Stevenson

Babies born by C-section at risk of developing allergies - 0 views

  • Henry Ford Hospital study suggests that C-section babies are susceptible to developing allergies by age two.
  • develop
  • Christine Cole Johnson, Ph.D., MPH, chair of Henry Ford Department of Health Sciences and the study's lead author.
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  • C-section babies have a pattern of "at risk" microorganisms in their gastrointestinal tract that may make them more susceptible to developing the antibody Immunoglobulin E, or IgE,
    • Katie Stevenson
       
      Whit is IgE? Is there a way to help prevent this from happening? Could this also cause other things in C-section babies?
Katie Raborn

Dissociative Identity Disorder: Overview and Current Research - Student Pulse - 0 views

  • who presented as a male (23 years) and a female (17 years). The client (host) was female and 30 years old, and had been diagnosed with DID for 13 years. During presentation of the young female personality, the client reported hearing the male alter, which was her primary symptom, along with anxiety and identity dissociation. The client experienced remission of anxiety and hallucinatory symptoms after a month of treatment with perospirone. Treatment was continued for 5 months, and medication was gradually reduced over a period of 9 months. At the time of writing, the client had experienced remission of dissociative symptoms for 1 year
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There was a study on a 30 year old women and she had two different personalities.
  • DID can involve some degree of amnesi
  • Autobiographical memories may differ between alter personalities, allowing the host to retain positive memories while alters contain negative traumatic memorie
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  • This study clarifies the mechanism and function of memory in various dissociative states and helps explain why trauma might result in the development of alters.
Katie Raborn

Schizophrenia - 0 views

  • no known single cause responsible for schizophrenia
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There isn't a cause for schizophrenia.
  • chemical imbalance in the brain is an inherited factor which is necessary for schizophrenia to develop.
  • -genetic, behavioral, and environmental--play a role in the development of this mental health condition.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The disorder can be caused by behavioral, genetic, and environmental roles.
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  • considered to be multifactorially inherited
  • Multifactorial inheritance means that "many factors"
  • where a combination of genes from both parents, in addition to unknown environmental factors, produce the trait or condition
  • factors are usually both genetic and environmental
  • Often, one gender (either males or females) is affected more frequently than the other in multifactorial traits
    • Katie Raborn
       
      one gender in the family is effect more than the other gender. Which means one gender is more likely to show the problem of having schizophrenia.
  • means that one gender is more likely to show the problem
  • Slightly more males develop schizophrenia in childhood, however, by adolescence schizophrenia affects males and females equally.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      More males are effected in early childhood rather than females but it still effects males and females equally.
  • Although schizophrenia affects men and women equally, symptoms in men generally begin earlier than in women
  • schizophrenia first appears in men during their late teens or early 20s
  • women, schizophrenia often first appears during their 20s or early 30s.
  • schizophrenia affects 2.7 million Americans
  • child born into a family with one or more schizophrenic family member has a greater chance of developing schizophrenia than a child born into a family with no history of schizophrenia.
  • chance for a sibling to also be diagnosed with schizophrenia is 7 to 8 percen
  • If a parent has schizophrenia, the chance for a child to have the disorder is 10 to 15 percen
  • Risks increase with multiple affected family members.
  • Distorted perception of reality (i.e., difficulty telling dreams from reality) Confused thinking (i.e., confusing television with reality) Detailed and bizarre thoughts and ideas Suspiciousness and/or paranoia (fearfulness that someone, or something, is going to harm them) Hallucinations (seeing, hearing, or feeling things that are not real such as hearing voices telling them to do something) Delusions (ideas that seem real but are not based in reality) Extreme moodiness Severe anxiety and/or fearfulness Flat affect (lack of emotional expression when speaking) or inability to manage emotions Difficulty in performing functions at work and/or school Exaggerated self-worth and/or unrealistic sense of superiority of one's self Social withdrawal (severe problems in making and keeping friends ) Disorganized or catatonic behavior (suddenly becoming agitated and confused, or sitting and staring, as if immobilized) Odd behaviors
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Some symptoms of Schizophrenia but people can experience different symptoms of the disorder
  • The symptoms of schizophrenia are often classified as positive (symptoms including delusions, hallucinations, and bizarre behavior), negative (symptoms including flat affect, withdrawal, and emotional unresponsiveness), disorganized speech (including speech that is incomprehensible), and disorganized or catatonic behavior (including marked mood swings, sudden aggressive, or confusion, followed by sudden motionlessness and staring).
    • Katie Raborn
       
      There are different classifications of schizophrenia such as positive, negative, and catatonic behavior.
  • diagnosed by a psychiatrist
  • Specific treatment for schizophrenia will be determined by your physician based on: Your age, overall health, and medical history Extent of the disease Your tolerance for specific medications, procedures, or therapies Expectations for the course of the disease Your opinion or preference
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Treatment is based on many different things like age, health and medical history
  • Types of treatment that may be helpful to an individual with schizophrenia may include: Medications (also called psychopharmacological management; to reduce the symptoms of schizophrenia), including the following: Neuroleptics--a specialized class of medications used to treat schizophrenia. Neuroleptics are used primarily to treat the pervasive, intrusive, and disturbing thoughts of a person with schizophrenia. They are designed to help minimize the severity of delusions and hallucinations the individual is experiencing. Antipsychotic medications--medications that act against the symptoms of psychotic illness, but do not cure the illness. However, these medications can reduce symptoms or reduce the severity of symptoms; a specialized class of medications used to treat schizophrenia. Individual and family psychotherapy (including cognitive and behavioral therapy) Specialized educational and/or structured activity programs (i.e., social skills training, vocational training, speech and language therapy) Self-help and support groups
  • Preventive measures to reduce the incidence of schizophrenia are not known at this time
Katie Raborn

Infants learn to look and look to learn | Iowa Now - The University of Iowa - 0 views

  • John Spencer, a psychology professor at the UI and a co-author on the paper published in the journal Cognitive Science.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source
  • mathematical model that mimics, in real time and through months of child development
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They have created mathematical models
  • “The model can look, like infants, at a world that includes dynamic, stimulating events that influence where it looks. We contend (the model) provides a critical link to studying how social partners influence how infants distribute their looks, learn, and develop,”
    • Katie Raborn
       
      This is how the model works.
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  • The model examines the looking-learning behavior of infants as young as 6 weeks through one year of age, through 4,800 simulations at various points in development involving multiple stimuli and tasks. As would be expected, most infants introduced to new objects tend to look at them to gather information about them; once they do, they are “biased” to look away from them in search of something new
  • an infant will linger on something that’s being shown to it for the first time as it learns about it, and that the “total looking time” will decrease as the infant becomes more familiar with it.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      An infant will look at something until he/she is familiar with it.
  • infants who don’t spend a sufficient amount of time studying a new object—in effect, failing to learn about it and to catalog that knowledge into memory—don’t catch on as well, which can affect their learning later on.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Infants that don't spend enough time studying a new object, later on will affect their learning later on in their lifetime.
  • Sammy Perone, a post-doctoral researcher in psychology at the UI and corresponding author on the pape
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source
  • To examine why infants need to dwell on objects to learn about them, the researchers created two different models. One model learned in a "responsive" world: Every time the model looked away from a new object, the object was jiggled to get the model to look at it again. The other model learned in a "nonresponsive" world: when this model looked at a new object, objects elsewhere were jiggled to distract it. The results showed that the responsive models“learned about new objects more robustly, more quickly, and are better learners in the end,
  • infants can familiarize themselves with new objects, and store them into memory well enough that when shown them again, they quickly recognized them
  • “if that’s the case, we can manipulate and change what the brain is doing” to aid infants born prematurely or who have special needs, Perone adds.
Katie Stevenson

C-Section May Raise Child's Risk of Allergies, Asthma: Study - 0 views

  • that early childhood exposure to microorganisms affects the immune system's development and onset of allergies
  • a baby's exposure to bacteria in the birth canal is a major influencer on their immune system."
  • born by C-section have a pattern of "at-risk" microorganisms in their gastrointestinal tract that may make them more susceptible to developing the antibody immunoglobulin E (IgE) when exposed to allergens,
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  • IgE is linked to the development of allergies and asthma.
  • The study found an association between cesarean birth and allergy risk, but it did not prove cause-and-effect.
Katie Raborn

Babies Learn To Talk By Reading Lips, New Research Suggests - 0 views

  • developmental psychologist David Lewkowicz of Florida Atlantic University
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Source
  • Babies don't learn to talk just from hearing sounds. New research suggests they're lip-readers too.
  • 6 months, babies begin shifting from the intent eye gaze of early infancy to studying mouths when people talk to them.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Babies study mouths at around 6 months
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  • absorb the movements that match basic sounds
  • first birthdays, babies start shifting back to look you in the eye again
    • Katie Raborn
       
      by their first birthdays infants start looking in your eyes again.
  • University of Iowa psychology professor Bob McMurray, who also studies speech development.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Source
  • quality face-time with your tot is very important for speech development – more than, say, turning on the latest baby DVD.
  • Other studies have shown that babies who are best at distinguishing between vowel sounds like "ah" and "ee" shortly before their first birthday wind up with better vocabularies and pre-reading skills by kindergarten.
  • babies also look to speakers' faces for important social cues about what they're hearing
  • So he and doctoral student Amy Hansen-Tift tested nearly 180 babies, groups of them at ages 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 months. How? They showed videos of a woman speaking in English or Spanish to babies of English speakers. A gadget mounted on a soft headband tracked where each baby was focusing his or her gaze and for how long.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Lewkowicz and Hansen tested how babies learn
  • They found a dramatic shift in attention: When the speaker used English, the 4-month-olds gazed mostly into her eyes. The 6-month-olds spent equal amounts of time looking at the eyes and the mouth. The 8- and 10-month-olds studied mostly the mouth.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Different age groups studied the speaker differently.
  • At 12 months, attention started shifting back toward the speaker's eyes.
  • at 6 months, babies begin observing lip movement, Lewkowicz says, because that's about the time babies' brains gain the ability to control their attention rather than automatically look toward noise.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      At age 6 months babies brains gain the ability to control their attention.
  • Duke University cognitive neuroscientist Greg Appelbaum
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Source
Katie Stevenson

Delivery By By C-Section Increases Risk Of Allergies In Childhood - 0 views

  • a Henry Ford Hospital study suggests that C-section babies are susceptible to developing allergies by age two.
  • was presented at the American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology annual meeting in San Antonio.
  • says Christine Cole Johnson, Ph.D., MPH, chair of Henry Ford Department of Health Sciences
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  • C-section babies have a pattern of "at risk" microorganisms in their gastrointestinal tract that may make them more susceptible to developing the antibody Immunoglobulin E, or IgE, when exposed to allergens
  • Article Date: 26 Feb 2013 - 1:00 PST
  •  
    Could a C-Section increase the risk of allergies in children?
Ceara Warren

Young people who go out drinking start earlier and consume more and more alcohol - 0 views

  • According to results, males drink more and aim to get drunk yet they associate their alcohol intake with the possibility of developing an addiction to a lesser extent than females.
  • We have observed that university students progressed to drink more alcohol. When they were adolescents they drank less alcohol and then more when reaching university. Nonetheless, today's adolescents drink the same amount as university students," outlines Espejo.
  • What will happen to these adolescents in a few years
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  • If intake levels for secondary school and university students of the same sex are similar, this means that when secondary school students reach the age of 20, the consequences will be much greater than those seen amongst current university students.
  • "Nearly all adolescents who consumed alcohol started at around 13 or 14 years of age by drinking distilled alcohol (drinks with high alcohol content) in large quantities. On the other hand, university students started between 14 and 15 with fermented drinks like beer in relatively low quantities," confirms the expert.
  • the main reason for alcohol consumption in both groups is to have fun
  • The consequences are not understood
  • As for the consequences associated with alcohol consumption, neither youngsters nor university students are aware of the consequences.
  • They only take into consideration those consequences that repeatedly appear in television campaigns, like those relating to drink driving and personal relationship problems due to aggression.
  • They are also only aware of the immediate physical consequences like vomiting, dizziness, falling over and hangovers, etc.
  • ather that it is not recognised," concludes the researcher.
  • n general, youngsters feel that their alcohol consumption will have no negative consequences. They believe that for this to occur they would have to greatly increase their alcohol consumption. This, however, does not imply that the problem does not already exist but
  •  
    "Teenagers and university students are unaware of the negative consequences of alcohol consumption or the chances of developing an addiction as a result." Interesting..
Ruby Ridgway

Study prompts rethink of how ovaries develop - 0 views

  • polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS
    • Ruby Ridgway
       
      Could be significant to me, because my sister has been diagnosed with PCOS and there is a high chance that I also have it.
  •  
    New studies on how the ovaries form. Found new cell type (GREL).
Caitlan Granger

Effect of teenage parenthood on mental health... [Am J Epidemiol. 2010] - PubMed - NCBI - 0 views

  • Although the mental health of teenage fathers improved at a faster rate compared with nonparenting teenage males, teenage mothers improved at a slower rate compared with nonparenting teenage females.
  •  
    Government website, national, fact based. Talked about how sex and teenage parenthood affect mental development.
Alexis Ramsey

Understanding General Canine Genetics - 0 views

  • In the dog, there are 78 chromosomes existing of 39 matched pairs which make up the dog’s “genotype”. On the other hand, the dog’s “phenotype” is what the animal actually looks like and this can be influenced by both environmental and developmental factors. For example, a dog’s adult size is partially determined by his genotype but is also influenced by such factors as health and nutrition as a puppy.
    • Alexis Ramsey
       
      Dog size depends on the dog's "phenotype". This is influenced by both environmental and developments factors. Such as the heath and the way the dog grew up.
  • Dr. John Hill 5658 E. 22nd Street Tucson, AZ 85711 (520) 748-1415
  • Each gene provides the genetic instruction to make one protein or control one function. For example, the genes tell the cell to produce a certain chemical or to produce a specific characteristic like blue eyes.
Katie Raborn

New Studies Reveal Infants' World of Vision - 0 views

  • eye-tracking technology has been around for years, it is now small enough to be used to examine how toddlers view their environment.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Technology called eye-tracking has been changed so now its small enough to examine toddlers views of the environment.
  • New York University led by Karen Adolph
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source
  • Finn, an 8.5-month-old toddler, was among the participants in this project. She was being coaxed to wear the eye-tracking headgear, which consists of two cameras - one that's looking out on the scene to get the baby's perspective, and another that's looking at the eye to track the movement of the pupil. A computer analyzed both camera views to determine exactly where Finn was looking.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They tested an 8.5 month-old toddler, named Finn with the new eye tracking gear. The gear weighs only 45.4 grams.
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  • Jason Babcock is the founder of Positive Science, a New York company that has developed eye-tracking devices over the last decade
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source/ co-founder of Positive Science
  • John Franchak, a doctoral student at NYU and leader of the project
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Creditable source and led the project on Finn.
  • infants would be looking at their mothers constantly because that was common knowledge within [the field of] social cognition with infants." But in a room full of toys scattered everywhere and obstacles to climb on and crawl on, the infants only looked toward their mothers about half the time.  And even if they did look at their mothers, they looked at their mothers' faces only about 15 percent of the time.
  • toddlers almost always look directly at the object when reaching for it.
  • Toddlers are able to use information from their peripheral vision and still walk very well.
  • Another interesting finding was that while infants look directly at an obstacle before walking onto or over it, 75 percent of the time they don't always have to.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The toddlers didn't have to look at the obstacle all the time. they were able to use information for their peripheral vision.
  • According to Franchak, down the line it could offer more research applications that could help infants with developmental disorders, medical research and applied research.   
Katie Stevenson

CHCR: People: Christine C. Johnson, PhD, MPH - 0 views

  • Phone: 313.874.6672 Email: cjohnso1@hfhs.org
    • Katie Stevenson
       
      Questions: Can this be applied to other things such as asthma and the development of it in children? Is there any way to prevent this? Should this make people weary of C-sections? What does this mean for later research?
  •  
    Contact Info for Dr. Christine Johnson
Katie Raborn

Newborn infants learn while asleep; Study may lead to later disability tests - 0 views

  • "We found a basic form of learning in sleeping newborns, a type of learning that may not be seen in sleeping adults
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Newborns could learn while sleeping. How do they learn while sleeping? How do they figure that out? How come sleeping adults can't do that, since adults are more developed?
  • Dana Byrd, a research affiliate in psychology at UF
    • Katie Raborn
       
      credible source
  • The findings give valuable information about how it is that newborns are able to learn so quickly from the world, when they sleep for 16 to 18 hours a da
    • Katie Raborn
       
      When a newborn sleeps for 16 to 18 hours a day they are able to learn quickly about the world.
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  • ested the learning abilities of sleeping newborns by repeating tones that were followed by a gentle puff of air to the eyelids.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They tested the newborns by the repeating tones. Could they test other things to figure out how newborns learn while sleeping? How do they know if they aren't just dreaming instead of learning?
  • After about 20 minutes, 24 of the 26 babies squeezed their eyelids together when the tone was sounded without the puff of air.
  • The brain waves of the 24 infants were found to change, providing a neural measurement of memory updating.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      So brainwaves detect memory updating.
  • While past studies find this type of learning can occur in infants who are awake, this is the first study to document it in their most frequent state, while they are asleep
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Infants learn while their awake but can also be found while they are asleep.
  • Learned eyelid movement reflects the normal functioning of the circuitry in the cerebellum, a neural structure at the base of the brain. This study's method potentially offers a unique non-invasive tool for early identification of infants with atypical cerebellar structure, who are potentially at risk for a range of developmental disorders, including autism and dyslexia, she said.
  • Newborn infants' sleep patterns are quite different than those of older children or adults in that they show more active sleep where heart and breathing rates are very changeable," she said. "It may be this sleep state is more amenable to experiencing the world in a way that facilitates learning."
  • Another factor is that infants' brains have greater neural plasticity, which is the ability for the neural connections to be changed
Megan Hanak

Stopping cold: Scientists turn off the ability to feel cold - 0 views

  • even when the cold should have been painful or was potentially dangerous.
    • Megan Hanak
       
      Does the absence of TRPM8 take away basic instinct as well as cold? The mouse should have died from an attack of the central nervous system and frozen organs. Slowing blood flow. Even brain deficiencies. Did the mouse die?
  • scientists hope to one day develop better pain treatments without knocking out all ability to feel for suffering patients.
    • Megan Hanak
       
      Better pain treatments for which diseases?
Megan Hanak

Tool for reading the minds of mice developed - 0 views

  • neurodegenerative
    • Megan Hanak
       
      What is a neurodegenerative? and alzheimers can be cured from mice? If we can treat alzheimers by using the brain activity of mice, what else can we do with them?
taylor abutalebi

computer models can they help brain damage and concussions for soliders and athletes - 0 views

To find out, Johns Hopkins engineers have developed a powerful new computer-based process that helps identify the dangerous conditions that lead to concussion-related brain injuries.

started by taylor abutalebi on 06 Mar 13 no follow-up yet
Indea Armstrong

Planarians offer a better view of eye development - 0 views

  • intense study for their renowned ability to regenerate any missing body par
    • Indea Armstrong
       
      Is the flatworm harmful ?
  • courtesy of Whitehead Institute researchers, who this week are publishing in Cell Reports
Zaphron Richardson

Human Vision Inadequate For Research On Bird Vision - 0 views

  • Through evolution, our colour vision has developed from a more primitive version.
    • Zaphron Richardson
       
      This is what made me look up about sight evolution in the first place. I wondered what colors that we cant see in the electromagnetic spectrum would look like, and perhaps humans used to be able to see more or different colors than we do now in earlier stages of our evolution. I then asked myself, what if the colors we see are the ones we need to survive? Maybe it is possible that those with a mutation that widened or altered the "visible" spectrum were not fit for survival long ago, and what we see now is the result of evolution of our species.
Katie Raborn

What Are Babies Thinking Before They Start Talking? - 0 views

  • Elizabeth Spelke, professor of psychology at Harvard University
    • Katie Raborn
       
      source
  • Sue Hespos, assistant professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University
    • Katie Raborn
       
      source
  • Babies as young as five months old make distinctions about categories of events that their parents do not, revealing new information about how language develops in humans.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Babies can already make distinctions as young as 5 months. Which is pretty cool, knowing that most parents don't think infants know much that young when actually they are learning.
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  • children do think before they speak.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      So infants do think before they speak.
  •  
    What babies are thinking before they can talk
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