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Alexis Ramsey

nsf.gov - National Science Foundation (NSF) Discoveries - Older Is Better for Hunting D... - 0 views

  • Older dogs and male dogs are better hunting companions than younger dogs and female dogs says the author of a new study on the hunting ability and nutritional status of domestic dogs in lowland Nicaragua
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    Older dogs and male dogs are better hunting company than yonger and female dogs.
Alexis Ramsey

With age comes greater success among hunting dogs - 0 views

  • Apr. 16, 2012
  • lowland Nicaragua, UC
  • male dogs seem to enjoy better success rates than do younger and female dogs.
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • The research examined variables such as age and sex
  • The UC research was conducted in Nicaragua's Bosawas Biosphere Reserve, which is part of the largest unbroken tracts of Neotropical rainforest in Central America, north of the Amazon Rainforest
  • their owners than did younger dogs. And bigger dogs are able to track and corral bigger prey, which increases their hunting return rates, and in general, male dogs are bigger than females.
    • Alexis Ramsey
       
      Summary- Research in Nicaragua's Bosawas Biosphere Reserve showed that male dogs seem to enjoy better success rates than younger and female dogs do. Variables such as age and sex play a big role in finding your good hunting dog. The older the better, as well as the bigger the better. Males tend to always be bigger than female dogs and with having a big dog it's able to track larger prey therefore returning more game and making out for a better hunter.
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    Older male dogs better than younger or female dogs.
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.
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    New studies on how the ovaries form. Found new cell type (GREL).
Katie Stevenson

Stem cell breakthrough - 0 views

  • carried out by Dr Emmajayne Kingham
  • in collaboration with the University of Glasgow and published in the journal Small,
  • cultured human embryonic stem cells on to the surface of plastic materials and assessed their ability to change.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • could
  • could
  • University of Southampton
Anna Wermuth

Emotionally intelligent people are less good at spotting liars - 0 views

    • Anna Wermuth
       
      This study shows that emotional intelligence doesn't always help in determining whether someone is lying; it actually makes one overconfident in their assessment and in turn makes their guess inaccurate.
Carolina Torres

Top 10 Medical Benefits from Marijuana - 2 views

  • Cigarette smoke causes cancer because the tobacco is radiated whereas marijuana isn’t. In fact, the American Association for Cancer Research has found the marijuana actually works to slow down tumor growth in the lungs, bitches, and brain considerably.
    • Carolina Torres
       
      Why is there bitches in this? And see what makes it so bad if it helps slow down the growth of things?
    • msdchemistry
       
      Makes me question the reliability of this source... reputable journals don't write using incorrect grammar (the not than) and name calling..
  • Marijuana’s treatment of glaucoma has been one of the best documented. There isn’t a single valid study that exists that disproves marijuana’s very powerful and popular effects on glaucoma patients.
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.
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    Government website, national, fact based. Talked about how sex and teenage parenthood affect mental development.
Natalie Mitten

Perfectionism, Procrastination, and Distress | Psychology Today - 0 views

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    Lots of studies linked, was thorough and fact-based. Discusses relationship between perfectionism and procrastination.
Natalie Mitten

What we can learn from procrastination : The New Yorker - 0 views

  • The philosopher Mark Kingwell puts it in existential terms: “Procrastination most often arises from a sense that there is too much to do, and hence no single aspect of the to-do worth doing
  • Underneath this rather antic form of action-as-inaction is the much more unsettling question whether anything is worth doing at all.”
  • The procrastinator’s challenge, and perhaps the philosopher’s, too, is to figure out which is which.
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    Interesting. Long, never gets to an end point...sounds like something I would write. Many various sources, from economists to social scientists to philosophers. I found it interesting that academics and scholars were more prone to it, and that in the adult world there are many prime examples of procrastinations directly marring their gain (i.e., tax returns). 
Natalie Mitten

What we can learn from procrastination : The New Yorker - 0 views

    • Natalie Mitten
       
      Says "articles" but doesn't note any articles. hmm. Credible statement?
  • The Thief of Time,” edited by Chrisoula Andreou and Mark D. White (Oxford; $65)
  • anxiety about it as a serious problem seems to have emerged in the early modern era
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  • Piers Steel, a business professor at the University of Calgary, the percentage of people who admitted to difficulties with procrastination quadrupled between 1978 and 2002
  • Americans waste hundreds of millions of dollars because they don’t file their taxes on time
  • Harvard economist David Laibson has shown
  • that American workers have forgone huge amounts of money in matching 401(k) contributions because they never got around to signing up for a retirement plan.
  • Seventy per cent of patients suffering from glaucoma risk blindness because they don’t use their eyedrops regularly
  • delaying tough decisions
  • Piers Steel defines procrastination as willingly deferring something even though you expect the delay to make you worse off.
  • sixty-five per cent of students surveyed before they started working on a term paper said they would like to avoid procrastinating: they knew both that they wouldn’t do the work on time and that the delay would make them unhappy.
chrystopher9

Listening to Music While Studying Can Help | TakeLessons - 1 views

  • It is widely accepted that the best environment for concentration is a quiet one; however the majority of students in the US say they prefer to study while listening to music, and in fact the highest achieving students are even guiltier of this.  Why do students do this?
  • se, to motivate themselves, to stay awake or to calm nerves… Whatever the reason, it’s important to find music that will serve your needs, while causing the least amount of distraction. The type of music a
  • type of music students report listening to while studying is popular music.  However, if a person chooses to listen to music
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    "Ah, the power of music! Recent research has found that fast-paced beats can increase your exercise intensity and slow, quiet music can even reduce stress."
Alec Myers

How Texting Can Improve Mental Health | Psychology Today - 0 views

    • Alec Myers
       
      Didn't realize that texting can improve mental health and by hearing someones voice via phone can help lessen stress.
Katie Stevenson

Socioeconomic Disparities In Health: Pathways And Policies - 0 views

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    How a persons socioeconomic data and status effects their health
Caitlan Granger

Teen Pregnancy May Be Symptom, Not Cause, Of Emotional Distress - 0 views

  • “Psychological distress does not appear to be caused by teen childbearing, nor does it cause teen childbearing, except apparently among girls from poor households,”
  • Only the combination of poverty and existing distress was a good predictor of teen pregnancy.
  • nationally representative studies had not examined if distress was present before the pregnancy and stresses of young motherhood.
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  • Psychologically distressed girls are at risk for teen childbearing and vice versa, even if the two things usually do not cause each other,” Mollborn said. “This could help educators and clinicians identify at-risk adolescents.”
  • One of the best ways to prevent teen pregnancy is for teens to have long-term goals and good self-esteem, Merritt added.
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    talks about how teen parenthood could be caused because of emotional/psychological "distress" before the pregnancy
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    good references, many references. quoted doctors and universities.
Natalie Mitten

Procrastination « You Are Not So Smart - 0 views

  • A study conducted in 1999 by Read, Loewenstein and Kalyanaraman
  • The researchers had a hunch people would go for the junk food first, but plan healthy meals in the future.
  • The revelation from this research is kids who were able to overcome their desire for short-term reward in favor of a better outcome later weren’t smarter than the other kids, nor were they less gluttonous. They just had a better grasp of how to trick themselves into doing what was best for them.
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  • “Once Mischel began analyzing the results, he noticed that low delayers, the children who rang the bell quickly, seemed more likely to have behavioral problems, both in school and at home. They got lower S.A.T. scores. They struggled in stressful situations, often had trouble paying attention, and found it difficult to maintain friendships. The child who could wait fifteen minutes had an S.A.T. score that was, on average, two hundred and ten points higher than that of the kid who could wait only thirty seconds.” - Jonah Lehrer from his piece in the New Yorker, “Don’t”
  • “The future is always ideal: The fridge is stocked, the weather clear, the train runs on schedule and meetings end on time. Today, well, stuff happens.” - Hara Estroff Marano in Psychology Today
  • Interestingly, these results suggest that although almost everyone has problems with procrastination, those who recognize and admit their weakness are in a better position to utilize available tools for precommitment and by doing so, help themselves overcome it. - Dan Ariely, from his book “Predictably Irrational”
Imani West

Inappropriate Inhalation of Duster Cans | Education.com - 0 views

    • Imani West
       
      Why is it that the long-term users really don't have any mental or heart damage?
    • msdchemistry
       
      Good question. Any hunches?
Natalie Mitten

Snapshots explore Einstein's unusual brain : Nature News & Comment - 0 views

  • anthropologist Dean Falk of Florida State University in Tallahassee and her colleagues
  • pathologist Thomas Harvey
  • Einstein’s brain was smaller than average
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • According to Sandra Witelson, a behavioural neuroscientist at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, who discovered that the parietal operculum is missing from Einstein’s brain
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