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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.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • 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 Raborn

Infants learn to look and look to learn: Model explains crucial links among looking, le... - 0 views

  • The researchers created a mathematical model that mimics
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Researchers can use mathematical models to learn about the infants development.
  • Researchers at the University of Iowa have documented an activity by infants that begins nearly from birth:
    • Katie Raborn
       
      Sources
Indea Armstrong

Eyes work without connection to brain: Ectopic eyes function without natural connection... - 0 views

  • scientists have shown that transplanted eyes located far outside the head in a vertebrate animal model can confer vision without a direct neural connection to the brain.
    • Indea Armstrong
       
      How does that work? How can you possibly use your eyes and they aren't connected to your brain?
  • Biologists at Tufts University School of Arts and Sciences used a frog model to shed new ligh
    • Indea Armstrong
       
      How closely are humans related to frogs?
  • visual
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • is the question of exactly how the brain recognizes that the electrical signals coming from tissue near the gut is to be interpreted as visual data
LeeAnna Haynes

Stem cells may hold promise for Lou Gehrig's disease (ALS) - 0 views

  • For the study, mice with an animal model of ALS were injected with human neural stem cells taken from human induced pluripotent stem cell
    • LeeAnna Haynes
       
      "For the study, mice with an animal model of ALS were injected with human neural stem cells taken from human induced pluripotent stem cells"
  • The study found that stem cell transplantation significantly extended the lifespan of the mice by 20 days and improved their neuromuscular function by 15 percent.
    • LeeAnna Haynes
       
      "The study found that stem cell transplantation significantly extended the lifespan of the mice by 20 days and improved their neuromuscular function by 15 percent."
taylor abutalebi

Computer model may help athletes and soldiers avoid brain damage and concussions - 0 views

    • taylor abutalebi
       
      "Think about a solider who is knocked down by blast wave of an explosion, or a football player reeling after a major collision
  • "Think about a soldier who is knocked down by the blast wave of an explosion, or a football player reeling after a major collision.
  • The person may show some loss of cognitive function, but you may not immediately see anything in a CT-scan or MRI that tells you exactly where and how much damage has been done to the brain. You don't know what happened to the brain, so how do you figure out how to treat the patient?"
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
Katie Stevenson

New target in polycystic kidney disease - 0 views

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    New treatments may help to tackle polycystic kidney disease
Katie Raborn

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

  • In one study involving 425 doctoral-level clinicians, nearly one-third believed that a diagnosis of Borderline Personality Disorder was more appropriate than DID.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They did a study on DID to see how its diagnosis.
  • DID requires the presence of at least two personalities, with a personality being identified as a entity having a unique pattern of perception
  • These personalities must also display a pattern of exerting control on the individual’s behavior
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  • Extensive and unusual loss of memory pertaining to personal information another feature of DID
    • Katie Raborn
       
      When you have DID you can loose your memory
  • Differential diagnosis generally involves ruling out the effects of chemical substances and medical (as opposed to psychological) conditions. When evaluating children, it is also important to ensure that symptoms are distinguishable from imaginary play (American Psychiatric Association, 2000).
  • In clinical populations, the estimated prevalence of DID ranges from 0.5 to 1.0% (Maldonado, Butler, & Spiegel, 2002). In the general population, estimates of prevalence are somewhat higher, ranging from 1-5% (Rubin & Zorumski, 2005). Females are more likely to receive a diagnosis of DID, at a ratio of 9:1 (Lewis-Hall, 2002
  • High percentages of individuals with DID have comorbid diagnoses of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder or Borderline Personality Disorde
  • DID commonly have a previous diagnosis of Schizophrenia. However, this most likely represents a misdiagnosis rather than comorbidity, du
  • Other possible comorbid disorders involve substance abuse, eating disorders, somatoform disorders, problems of anxiety and mood, personality disorders, psychotic disorders, and organic mental disorders (ISSD, 2005), OCD, or some combination of conversion and somatoform disorder
  • Other factors influencing a poor prognosis include remaining in abusive situations, involvement with criminal activity, substance abuse, eating disorders, or antisocial personality features
  • the average age of diagnosis is thirt
    • Katie Raborn
       
      The average person who gets diagnosed with the disorder is at thirty. What happens to when people are younger and not diagnosed
  • One study found that the risk of developing a dissociative disorder (DD) increased seven times with a child’s exposure to trauma.
  • Dissociative Identity Disorder is linked to childhood abuse in 95-98% of the cases
  • Studies on genetic factors contributing to DID present mixed findings. However, one study involving dyzogotic and monozygotic twins found that considerable variance in experiences of pathological dissociation could be attributed to both shared and non-shared environmental experiences, but heritability appeared to have no effect (Waller & Ross, 1997).
  • Treatment most commonly follows a framework of “1) safety, stabilization and symptom reduction, 2) working directly and in depth with traumatic memories, and 3) identity integration and rehabilitation” (p. 89).
  • A study involving 280 outpatient participants (98% DID diagnosis) from five different races (Caucasian, African American, Hispanic, Asian, and Other) demonstrated the effectiveness of a similar five-phase model in reducing symptoms of dissociation.
    • Katie Raborn
       
      They did a study on how effect the treatments are.
Natalie Mitten

Higgs data indicates finite life of universe › News in Science (ABC Science) - 0 views

    • Natalie Mitten
       
      This is quite vague...there will assuredly be many catastrophes in the universe in the next tens of billions of years...so what?
  • "You change any of these parameters to the Standard Model (of particle physics) by a tiny bit and you get a different end of the universe," says Lyyken.
    • Natalie Mitten
       
      This article mentions "calculations" and such but doesn't actually explain how scientists drew the conclusion...I'm seriously questioning the credibility of this article. 
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