Beverly Hills Real Estate Sparks Bidding Wars: The Rich Are Buying …

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After years of declining and flat-lining, Beverly Hills home prices are going up.

This could either be a good sign that this Debbie Downer of an economy is turning a corner, or it could be another example of how, even in tough times, the rich are getting richer while the rest suffer.

We?re going to cross our fingers and go with good sign:

Bloomberg is reporting that bidding wars are breaking out this spring for multi-million-dollar homes in the high-end, Westside communities of Beverly Hills, Bel Air and Pacific Palisades:

Sales of Beverly Hills homes priced at $2 million and higher climbed 11 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier to 39, according to DataQuick, a San Diego-based provider of property information. In Brentwood, whose residents include actress and singer Julie Andrews, they increased 56 percent to 25, and in Malibu they gained 64 percent to 23.

We had to do a double take and check the date of the piece to make sure it wasn?t from 2007.

So is this good news for the rest of L.A. and beyond? Maybe.

Not only are there bidding wars, but there are waiting lists to buy low ?inventory? of $2-million-plus homes, according to some real estate agents. Some of the purchasers are looking for investment property ? not places for themselves ? too.

Joyce Rey, a Coldwell Banker honcho in Beverly Hills, says:

There?s an added degree of confidence in the future and that prices are likely going to go up. There is a definite change in consumer attitude.

Now if only that attitude would trickle down to the rest of America.

[@dennisjromero / djromero@laweekly.com / @LAWeeklyNews]

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Beverly Hills Real Estate Sparks Bidding Wars: The Rich Are Buying Again ? Los Angeles News.

The funny thing is I have been blogging and doing videos about how strong our market is for about one year now and the media is only now reporting it LOL!.

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Mark Zuckerberg’s IPO challenge: A company that can ‘friend’ the 99 percent

Will the new publicly traded Facebook cater singularly to its wealthy shareholders? Mark Zuckerberg must strive to include ?we the users,? who made such a megabillion dollar concept possible, in his corporate model. He can start by offering a free share to each Facebook user.

By Alexander Heffner / May 18, 2012

Facebook founder, chairman, and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, center, applauds at the opening bell of the Nasdaq stock market May 18. Op-ed contributor Alexander Heffner writes of the Facebook IPO: At $38 a share, ‘it?s hardly affordable in any meaningful quantity to a twenty-something such as myself.’

Zef Nikolla via Facebook/AP

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?Facebook?s mission is to give people the power to share and make the world more open and connected.?

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Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook?s chief executive officer, contends this maxim remains at the core of the organization?s purpose. And on the pages of Facebook, these words still ring true, from facilitating communication between people who reside hemispheres apart, to disseminating the messages of citizens protesting repressive regimes like Syria?s, to connecting organ-seekers with potential donors.

But the initial public offering (IPO) that has just concluded was anything but ?open and connected? for ordinary Americans. ?Following the traditional Wall Street model, Facebook shares are being parceled out to a select group of investors at an offering run by the company?s bankers on Thursday evening, at an estimated $38 a share,? The New York Times reported yesterday.

I wanted to invest in Facebook because I believe in its generally powerful and life-affirming impact on humanity. But based on my own conversations with those familiar with the nature of the deal, I learned this week that I lacked the prerequisite ingredient: A personal connection to Facebook?s original backers.
Moreover, I would essentially be precluded from investing in the company until it went fully public and the price of its shares rose. Moreover, at $38, it?s hardly affordable in any meaningful quantity to a twenty-something such as myself.

?As leaders of a publicly-traded company, Mr. Zuckerberg and his colleagues have the potential to reform a corporate arena in which neither ethics nor concern for the wider American population guides many choices.

More than ever before, the notion of a ?public company? has become a grand misnomer: Capital raised and invested seeps through so few hands, and financial success in the stock market is still a remote reach for many Americans. In too many cases, the public and business interest have become uncomfortably antithetical.

To truly live up to its mission, Facebook will have to reconcile its millions of non-share-holding subscribers with the elite group of early angel investors and stakeholders who will control the company.

More than half of Americans have an active Facebook account. In an informal style that can appeal to the masses, Zuckerberg has the potential to rekindle confidence in the markets and to engage everyday Americans in the kind of economic growth that has been limited to only a handful of individuals in recent years.

To demonstrate this inclusiveness, Facebook could offer each unique user a piece of the enterprise (perhaps a free share or a discounted five-share stake in Facebook).

The company, further, could become a model for transparency and disclosure ? practicing what it preaches ? by virtually bringing the public inside its shareholder meetings and explanations of quarterly profit reports. Facebook has a charitable foundation that operates independently. But it should bring its social-justice mission directly into its business, making it one of its corporate objectives.

Zuckerberg and his team can also accomplish something by simply avoiding the kind of financial decision-making and scandals in which the rich try to get richer exclusively for themselves.

Recent examples of such misbehavior include former New Jersey Gov. Jon Corzine?s missing billion-plus-dollar fiasco, J.P. Morgan?s recent admission of ?stupid…bad judgment,? and a Facebook co-founder?s renouncement of his US citizenship to avoid taxation.

Zuckerberg has already proven his chops as a precocious innovator. But can he preside over a break from the current mold of financial management, and instead ground his corporate leadership in the ethos of Bill Gates?s post-Microsoft philanthropic activity?

If so, Zuckerberg can lead the best kind of publicly-minded revolution for the next generation of CEOs.

Alexander Heffner, a freelance journalist, has written for The Washington Post, Boston Globe, and USA Today.

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Senegal cattle dying, fields scorched amid drought

In the northeastern nook of Senegal, one of the most stable and developed nations in the drought-hit Sahel region, carcasses of cattle lie in the sun, the fields have withered and food depleted.

As scanty rains wreaked havoc across the belt, hitting drought-weary Chad, Niger, Mali and other countries, this west African hub is struggling to provide food to its people and entire villages are going hungry.

“The shepherds and people have told us they feel as if they have been left to their own devices,” said famed Senegalese singer Baaba Maal, who last week toured the Matam region from where he originates.

In Wodobere, a town of about 6,000 people skirting Mauritania, Maal — an ambassador for British charity Oxfam — called for urgent aid to avert famine as he toured the region, listening to the concerns of villagers and giving concerts.

Crops have failed across eight countries after late and erratic rains in 2011, and aid agencies have raised the spectre of a food crisis bigger than the one which left millions starving in 2010.

This is the third drought in the Sahel in a decade, and while the previous ones were felt mostly in Niger and parts of Chad, this year it has unfolded across the entire region.

In Mbelogne, a hamlet where most of the 450 residents survive off animal husbandry, its chief Ely Hamady Diallo said: “There are problems both with food and water, for people and for the animals.”

Here a cow carcass lies on the cracked, scorched earth. Emaciated cattle lie in the shade, too weak to lift themselves. The only well, some two kilometres from the village, is nearly dry.

“We can’t even respect tradition and offer you some cold milk. My cow died because she didn’t have anything to eat or drink,” said Yacine Diallo, holding her daughter in her arms.

“We have nothing left,” said Diallo, who came to Mbelogne to see Maal, adding that the situation is the same in her nearby village of Ndouloumadji.

In another village named Dolel, chief Mamadou Gaye does not complain about the drought, but calls for water pumps, machines to irrigate the land and proper health infrastructure.

Patrick Ezeala, who works with Oxfam in the region, said the food crisis is currently affecting 800,000 people in Senegal.

As the country struggles to feed its 13 million inhabitants, it imports basic goods such as rice, forcing the prices up.

“Twenty million people (in the Sahel) are threatened with famine because of a lack of rain, climate change, and the flare in the prices of basic goods,” said Maal after a concert in Wodobere which attracted several hundred people.

“In a few months’ time, the worst could unfold in front of our eyes. We need to act now,” he said, calling on authorities and international organisations to intervene and avoid a worst-case scenario.

Fatouma Sow and Penda Ndiaye came decked up for the concert, and after singing and dancing they reflected on the message of one of the country’s most respected artists.

“He spoke of a food crisis, it concerns us too. Before a kilo of rice cost 250 CFA francs, now it is 350 CFA francs (0.53 euro cents, $0.67). Here, it is hard for everyone,” said Sow.

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All best buy: Finish Line Coupon – Business – Sales

Finish Line Coupon – Best Choice for Your ShoppingIn case you need to purchase a good pair of athletic footwear but do not have time to hit the mall, you may search the Internet instead. There are literally hundreds of stores and sellers online that sell a variety of both perishable and non-perishable goods. You may even be surprised to find items that are not available in your country. Shopping online has made it possible to make a purchase without having to leave home for maximum convenience. With just a few clicks on the mouse, you will be able to buy the things that you have always wanted, and just wait for them to be shipped to your home. Aside from being able to save time and energy, you may even be able to save money by using coupons.Coupons and coupon codes can be used to obtain items for less than their original prices. If you want athletic shoes, in particular, you can use such coupons to shop at Finish Line. Finish Line is one of the most popular online retail o utlets that offer great selections of branded footwear. They have an assortment of running shoes, toning shoes, basketball shoes, and lots of other shoes.Well-known brands such as Nike, Puma, Reebok, Adidas, Brooks, Asics, Converse, and Sketchers are available here. If you have coupons, you can avail of discounted trainers, sneakers, and rubber shoes. These shoes will help you run and walk better. They will also improve your attire and give emphasis on your legs.If you want coupons and coupon codes that will allow you to buy items at 10%, 20%, 30%, or even 50% off, you should search the Internet. Type in keywords that you think will lead you to websites that offer such coupons and codes. There are Finish Line coupons that can let you have 15% off on $100, 10% off $60, and even free shipping with $75.Using coupons and coupon codes will enable you to enjoy great deals and discounts. They will let you shop without having to break your budget. They are indeed must-haves of every avid shopper. Hence, if you like to shop and purchase online, you should see to it that you stock up on coupons. Collect them from various sources, and be sure to keep track of their dates.You should make sure that you use your coupons before they expire. Otherwise, they will just come to a waste. If you do not use them, you can just give them away to family and friends; or you can use them to purchase discounted shoes that you will give away as gifts to the people you care about.Finish Line coupons are indeed the best options for shopping. They are easy to find and practical to use. Thanks to these coupons, you do not have to worry about sticking with your old shoes anymore. You can actually purchase new footwear online right at this minute if you have them. Always make sure to look for updated coupons online.

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‘Rare’ genetic variants are surprisingly common, life scientists report

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stuart Wolpert
swolpert@support.ucla.edu
310-206-0511
University of California – Los Angeles

A large survey of human genetic variation, published today in the online version of the journal Science, shows that rare genetic variants are not so rare after all and offers insights into human diseases.

“I knew there would be rare variation but had no idea there would be so much of it,” said the senior author of the research, John Novembre, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and of bioinformatics at UCLA.

A team of life scientists studied 202 genes in 14,002 people. The human genome contains some 3 billion base pairs; the scientists studied 864,000 of these pairs. While this is only a small part of the genome, the sample size of 14,002 people is one of the largest ever in a sequencing study in humans.

“Our results suggest there are many, many places in the genome where one individual, or a few individuals, have something different,” Novembre said. “Overall, it is surprisingly common that there is a rare variant in the population.

“This study doesn’t tell us how to cure a particular disease but suggests that disease in general may be caused by rare variants, and if you’re trying to find the genetic basis of disease, it’s important to focus on those variants. Understanding the genetic basis of disease provides clues to how the diseases work and clues about how to treat them.”

The scientists discovered one genetic variant every 17 bases, which was a dramatically higher rate than they expected, said Novembre, a population geneticist who is a member of UCLA’s interdepartmental program in bioinformatics.

Most of the time, only one person has the genetic variant and the other 14,001 do not.

“We saw lots of that,” he said. “We discovered there are many places in these 202 genes where there is variation and only a few individuals differ from the whole group, or only one differs. We also see evidence that a substantial fraction of these rare genetic variants appear to be deleterious in a long-term evolutionary sense and might impact disease.”

The research team included Daniel Wegmann, a former UCLA postdoctoral scholar in Novembre’s laboratory and a co-first author of the study; Darren Kessner, a UCLA graduate student in the bioinformatics interdepartmental Ph.D. program; colleagues from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (in fields including human genetics and biostatistics); and geneticists from international health care company GlaxoSmithKline, including project leader Matthew Nelson. The UCLA life scientists were involved in the population genetic analysis of the data.

In the study, 10,621 people had one of 12 diseases, including coronary artery disease, multiple sclerosis, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, osteoarthritis and Alzheimer’s disease; 3,381 did not have any of the diseases.

“The large sample size allows us to see patterns with more clarity than ever before,” Novembre said. “If rare variants are like distant stars, this kind of large sample size is like having the Hubble Telescope; it’s allowing us to see more than before. We see a ton of rare variation, and these rare variants more often make changes to proteins than not. In that way, this study has important implications for the genetic basis of disease in humans. It’s consistent with the idea that many diseases may be partly caused by rare variants.”

Human population growth helps to explain the large number of genetic variants, the scientists said.

“The fact that we see so many rare variants is in part due to the fact that human populations have been growing very rapidly,” Novembre said. “Because the human population has grown so much, the opportunity for mutations to occur has also grown. Some of the variants we are seeing are very young, dating to population growth since the invention of agriculture and even the Industrial Revolution; this growth has created many opportunities for mutation in the genome because there are so many transmissions of chromosomes from parent to child in large populations.”

The scientists isolated and sequenced the pieces of DNA from the 202 genes.

They estimated mutation rates from population genetic data, which has only rarely been done before.

“We have been able to estimate mutation rates for each of the genes, which has been difficult to do with smaller sample sizes,” Novembre said. “In future research, we can study mutation rates not just in these 202 genes, but genome-wide.”

Sequencing technologies are advancing rapidly, he said. “What seemed like science fiction in the past is science today.”

Rare genetic variants would not have been detectable in most previous studies, whose samples usually had fewer than 1,000 people.

Typically, in population genetics, it is difficult to estimate mutation rates separately from population sizes, but when you get to very large sample sizes, you can estimate the two separately, Novembre said.

“We estimate 202 mutation rates, one for each gene,” he said. “We show that the mutation rate varies from gene to gene. Follow-up studies may be able to reveal more about what factors affect mutation rates.”

Rare genetic variants are frequently geographically localized to small pockets around the globe rather than being widespread, Novembre said.

In the image accompanying this release, each vertical line represents one of the 202 genes. For each gene, the scientists plotted, at the top of the image, the number of genetic variants that have a frequency greater than 0.5 percent. When variants are greater than 0.5 percent, previous studies have been able to find most of them.

“With our large sample size, we can detect variants at a frequency less than 0.5 percent, and we see all of these, which have never been seen before,” Novembre said. “Previous studies have examined the tip of the iceberg of genetic variation, but there is all this rare variation that has been below the surface, below our threshold of detection. Now, with large sample sizes, we can see a more complete picture of human genetic diversity.”

The genetic code has changes that are “nonsynonymous” (they change the meaning of a protein) and “synonymous” (they don’t change the meaning of a protein).

“We see many nonsynonymous changes amongst the rare variants, and these are plausibly affecting disease in humans, though in ways that are not yet well understood,” Novembre said.

###

Novembre’s research was funded by the Searle Foundation. The central area of interest of his laboratory is the development of theory and statistical methods for analyzing genomic-scale population genetic data.

###

UCLA is California’s largest university, with an enrollment of nearly 38,000 undergraduate and graduate students. The UCLA College of Letters and Science and the university’s 11 professional schools feature renowned faculty and offer 337 degree programs and majors. UCLA is a national and international leader in the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. Six alumni and five faculty have been awarded the Nobel Prize.

For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

[ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 17-May-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Stuart Wolpert
swolpert@support.ucla.edu
310-206-0511
University of California – Los Angeles

A large survey of human genetic variation, published today in the online version of the journal Science, shows that rare genetic variants are not so rare after all and offers insights into human diseases.

“I knew there would be rare variation but had no idea there would be so much of it,” said the senior author of the research, John Novembre, an assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and of bioinformatics at UCLA.

A team of life scientists studied 202 genes in 14,002 people. The human genome contains some 3 billion base pairs; the scientists studied 864,000 of these pairs. While this is only a small part of the genome, the sample size of 14,002 people is one of the largest ever in a sequencing study in humans.

“Our results suggest there are many, many places in the genome where one individual, or a few individuals, have something different,” Novembre said. “Overall, it is surprisingly common that there is a rare variant in the population.

“This study doesn’t tell us how to cure a particular disease but suggests that disease in general may be caused by rare variants, and if you’re trying to find the genetic basis of disease, it’s important to focus on those variants. Understanding the genetic basis of disease provides clues to how the diseases work and clues about how to treat them.”

The scientists discovered one genetic variant every 17 bases, which was a dramatically higher rate than they expected, said Novembre, a population geneticist who is a member of UCLA’s interdepartmental program in bioinformatics.

Most of the time, only one person has the genetic variant and the other 14,001 do not.

“We saw lots of that,” he said. “We discovered there are many places in these 202 genes where there is variation and only a few individuals differ from the whole group, or only one differs. We also see evidence that a substantial fraction of these rare genetic variants appear to be deleterious in a long-term evolutionary sense and might impact disease.”

The research team included Daniel Wegmann, a former UCLA postdoctoral scholar in Novembre’s laboratory and a co-first author of the study; Darren Kessner, a UCLA graduate student in the bioinformatics interdepartmental Ph.D. program; colleagues from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (in fields including human genetics and biostatistics); and geneticists from international health care company GlaxoSmithKline, including project leader Matthew Nelson. The UCLA life scientists were involved in the population genetic analysis of the data.

In the study, 10,621 people had one of 12 diseases, including coronary artery disease, multiple sclerosis, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, osteoarthritis and Alzheimer’s disease; 3,381 did not have any of the diseases.

“The large sample size allows us to see patterns with more clarity than ever before,” Novembre said. “If rare variants are like distant stars, this kind of large sample size is like having the Hubble Telescope; it’s allowing us to see more than before. We see a ton of rare variation, and these rare variants more often make changes to proteins than not. In that way, this study has important implications for the genetic basis of disease in humans. It’s consistent with the idea that many diseases may be partly caused by rare variants.”

Human population growth helps to explain the large number of genetic variants, the scientists said.

“The fact that we see so many rare variants is in part due to the fact that human populations have been growing very rapidly,” Novembre said. “Because the human population has grown so much, the opportunity for mutations to occur has also grown. Some of the variants we are seeing are very young, dating to population growth since the invention of agriculture and even the Industrial Revolution; this growth has created many opportunities for mutation in the genome because there are so many transmissions of chromosomes from parent to child in large populations.”

The scientists isolated and sequenced the pieces of DNA from the 202 genes.

They estimated mutation rates from population genetic data, which has only rarely been done before.

“We have been able to estimate mutation rates for each of the genes, which has been difficult to do with smaller sample sizes,” Novembre said. “In future research, we can study mutation rates not just in these 202 genes, but genome-wide.”

Sequencing technologies are advancing rapidly, he said. “What seemed like science fiction in the past is science today.”

Rare genetic variants would not have been detectable in most previous studies, whose samples usually had fewer than 1,000 people.

Typically, in population genetics, it is difficult to estimate mutation rates separately from population sizes, but when you get to very large sample sizes, you can estimate the two separately, Novembre said.

“We estimate 202 mutation rates, one for each gene,” he said. “We show that the mutation rate varies from gene to gene. Follow-up studies may be able to reveal more about what factors affect mutation rates.”

Rare genetic variants are frequently geographically localized to small pockets around the globe rather than being widespread, Novembre said.

In the image accompanying this release, each vertical line represents one of the 202 genes. For each gene, the scientists plotted, at the top of the image, the number of genetic variants that have a frequency greater than 0.5 percent. When variants are greater than 0.5 percent, previous studies have been able to find most of them.

“With our large sample size, we can detect variants at a frequency less than 0.5 percent, and we see all of these, which have never been seen before,” Novembre said. “Previous studies have examined the tip of the iceberg of genetic variation, but there is all this rare variation that has been below the surface, below our threshold of detection. Now, with large sample sizes, we can see a more complete picture of human genetic diversity.”

The genetic code has changes that are “nonsynonymous” (they change the meaning of a protein) and “synonymous” (they don’t change the meaning of a protein).

“We see many nonsynonymous changes amongst the rare variants, and these are plausibly affecting disease in humans, though in ways that are not yet well understood,” Novembre said.

###

Novembre’s research was funded by the Searle Foundation. The central area of interest of his laboratory is the development of theory and statistical methods for analyzing genomic-scale population genetic data.

###

UCLA is California’s largest university, with an enrollment of nearly 38,000 undergraduate and graduate students. The UCLA College of Letters and Science and the university’s 11 professional schools feature renowned faculty and offer 337 degree programs and majors. UCLA is a national and international leader in the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. Six alumni and five faculty have been awarded the Nobel Prize.

For more news, visit the UCLA Newsroom and follow us on Twitter.



[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?

AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.

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SME study: P.R. Internet usage levels reach 50% | News is my …

The SME commissioned the study that polled local Internet users last month.

About half of Puerto Rico?s population ? split almost evenly between men and women between 25 and 39 years old ? uses the Internet to work or socialize, according to the 2012 edition of the Sales & Marketing Executives? ?Digital & Mobile Behavioral Study.?

Local usage levels have been consistently rising since 2005, when they were pegged at 33 percent, the study showed, noting the goal is to reach 60 percent by 2015.

Connection speeds are also on the rise, as more than 1.5 million people currently surf the web at broadband rates, according to the study that will be unveiled publicly this morning, two days after the government outlined its strategy to boost local broadband penetration and speeds in coming years.

The SME study, conducted by local research firm Estudios T?cnicos, noted that of the nearly 1.6 million users who are connected to the web, 50.6 percent are men, while 49.6 percent are women. More than half, or 55.6 percent of them are single who have at least a high school diploma and earn a salary of between $10,000 and $14,999.

Connecting at home, work
Most connections to the Internet, or 87.8 percent, are done from the home, while 23.3 percent of Internet users surf at work.

More than half, or 57 percent, of people surveyed confirmed that they use their smartphones to access the web, spending an average of 3.5 hours a week online. Texting, surfing the web and taking pictures are the three most popular uses given to smartphones, the study showed.

On the other hand, the research also found that 30 percent of those who are currently disconnected from the web used it at some point, but walked away either for economic (38 percent) or technological (27 percent) reasons.

Top 10 visited sites; online shopping trends
The list of websites favored by Puerto Rican web surfers include the most popular around the world, headed by Facebook, Google.com, and Youtube.com. Depending on the device used to access the web, other favored sites include Yahoo.com, Endi.com, Gmail.com, Hotmail.com, Twitter.com, Wikipedia.com and Clasificadosonline.com.

Perhaps unsurprisingly is the fact that 1.4 million people, or 88 percent of local residents, use social media websites, with an overwhelming majority (83.4 percent) signing in to Facebook. YouTube came in second at 32.2 percent, while Google+ edged out Twitter, with 21.7 percent and 19.3 percent, of respective usage.

Meanwhile, the SME study revealed people connected to the web are seemingly developing a taste and trust in online shopping, as 30.6 percent of those surveyed said they did some virtual shopping in 2012. That average is up from last year?s 24 percent total.

On average, local consumers spent about $205 on their online purchases this year.

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Apple Patent Application Lends Credence to Retina-Display Mac Rumors

It looks like we’ll be getting Retina display MacBook Pros sooner than later — this based on supply chain indicators and a recently published Apple patent application.

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Human genes transplanted into zebrafish: Helps identify genes related to autism, schizophrenia and obesity

ScienceDaily (May 16, 2012) ? What can a fish tell us about human brain development? Researchers at Duke University Medical Center transplanted a set of human genes into a zebrafish and then used it to identify genes responsible for head size at birth.

Researchers at Duke University Medical Center transplanted a set of human genes into a zebrafish and then used it to identify genes responsible for head size at birth.

Head size in human babies is a feature that is related to autism, a condition that recent figures have shown to be more common than previously reported, 1 in 88 children in a March 2012 study. Head size is also a feature of other major neurological disorders, such as schizophrenia.

“In medical research, we need to dissect events in biology so we can understand the precise mechanisms that give rise to neurodevelopmental traits,” said senior author Nicholas Katsanis, Ph.D., Jean and George Brumley Jr., MD, Professor of Developmental Biology, and Professor of Pediatrics and Cell Biology. “We need expert scientists to work side by side with clinicians who see such anatomic and other problems in patients, if we are to effectively solve many of our medical problems.”

The study was published online in Nature journal on May 16.

Katsanis knew that a region on chromosome 16 was one of the largest genetic contributors to autism and schizophrenia, but a conversation at a European medical meeting pointed him to information that changes within that same region of the genome also were related to changes in a newborn’s head size.

The problem was difficult to address because the region had large deletions and duplications in DNA, which are the most common mutational mechanisms in humans. “Interpretation is harrowingly hard,” said Katsanis, who is also director of the Duke Center for Human Disease Modeling.

The reason is that a duplication of DNA or missing DNA usually involves several genes. “It is very difficult to go from ‘here is a region with many genes, sometimes over 50′ to ‘these are the genes that are driving this pathology,’” Katsanis said.

“There was a light bulb moment,” Katsanis said. “The area of the genome we were exploring gave rise to reciprocal (opposite) defects in terms of brain cell growth, so we realized that overexpressing a gene in question might give one phenotype — a smaller head, while shutting down the same gene might yield the other, a larger head.”

The researchers transplanted a common duplication area of human chromosome 16 known to contain 29 genes into zebrafish embryos and then systematically turned up the activity of each transplanted human gene to find which might cause a small head (microcephaly) in the fish. They then suppressed the same gene set and asked whether any of them caused the reciprocal defect: larger heads (macrocephaly).

The researchers knew that deletion of the region that contained these 29 genes occurred in 1.7% of children with autism.

It took the team a few months to dissect such a “copy number variant” — an alteration of the genome that results in an abnormal number of one or more sections of chromosomal DNA.

“Now we can go from a genetic finding that is dosage-sensitive and start asking reasonable questions about this gene as it pertains to neurocognitive traits, which is a big leap,” Katsanis said. Neurocognitive refers to the ability to think, concentrate, reason, remember, process information, learn, understand and speak.

Many human conditions have anatomical features that are also related to genetics, he said. “There are major limitations in studying autistic or schizophrenic behavior in zebrafish, but we can measure head size, jaw size, or facial abnormalities.”

The single gene in question, KCTD13, is responsible for driving head size in zebrafish by regulating the creation and destruction of new neurons (brain cells). This discovery let the team focus on the analogous gene in humans. “This gene contributes to autism cases, and probably is associated with schizophrenia and also childhood obesity,” Katsanis said.

Once the gene has been uncovered, researchers can examine the protein it produces. “Once you have the protein, you can start asking valuable functional questions and learning what the gene does in the animal or human,” Katsanis said.

Copy number variants, such as the ones this team found on chromosome 16, are now thought to be one of the most common sources of genetic mutations. Hundreds, if not thousands, of such chromosomal deletions and duplications have been found in patients with a broad range of clinical problems, particularly neurodevelopmental disorders.

“Now we may have an efficient tool for dissecting them, which gives us the ability to improve both diagnosis and understanding of disease mechanisms,” Katsanis said.

The current study suggests that KCTD13 is a major contributor to some cases of autism, but also points to the synergistic action of this gene with two other genes in the region, named MVP and MAPK3, Katsanis said.

Other authors include lead author Christelle Golzio, Jason Willer and Edwin Oh of the Duke Center for Human Disease Modeling and Department of Cell Biology; Mike Talkowski, Mei Sun and Jim Guzella from the Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, Center for Human Genetic Research, Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston; Sebastien Jacquemont, Alexandre Reymond and Jacques Beckmann from the Service de G?n?tique M?dicale, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, in Lausanne, Switzerland; and Yu Taniguchi, Akira Sawa and Atsushi Kamiya from the Department of Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore.

Funding is from a Silvio O. Conte Center grant from the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), National Institutes of Health grants, the Simons Foundation, the Autism Consortium of Boston, the Leenaards Foundation Prize, the Swiss National Science Foundation, a National Science Foundation Sinergia grant, an NIMH National Research Service Award, and an academic study award from the University of Lausanne.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Duke University Medical Center.

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Journal Reference:

  1. Christelle Golzio, Jason Willer, Michael E. Talkowski, Edwin C. Oh, Yu Taniguchi, S?bastien Jacquemont, Alexandre Reymond, Mei Sun, Akira Sawa, James F. Gusella, Atsushi Kamiya, Jacques S. Beckmann, Nicholas Katsanis. KCTD13 is a major driver of mirrored neuroanatomical phenotypes of the 16p11.2 copy number variant. Nature, 2012; 485 (7398): 363 DOI: 10.1038/nature11091

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

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Recovering From Infidelity | Romance Recovery

by admin ~ May 14th, 2012. Filed under: making it work, Relationships.

One of the most common reasons couples split up is because of infidelity. For many people, infidelity is a hard limit: no second chances allowed, the relationship is over, period. The end.

Nothing stirs up the core wound of betrayal faster than discovering your partner had an affair. The core wound of betrayal is one of seven core wounds we all work through as we grow in our relationships and in consciousness. (You can learn more about the core wounds here)

Infidelity is one of the hardest things to get over and forgive in a relationship, but it is possible. You can do it, but only if you decide that you want to forgive and heal. Your partner has to want to move forward, too. Unless he used the affair as a cowardly way to end your relationship, he?ll probably be anxious to be forgiven and willing to do whatever it takes to earn back your trust.

Trust is the crux of it; the wounding from an affair has many layers, but the bottom line and the root of it all is that when your partner has an affair, he betrays your trust. With that betrayal, your world feels unsafe. If you can?t trust your partner, who can you trust? And worse, if your partner cheated on you, can you even trust yourself? Could your judgment be that flawed, could you really be that naive? The betrayal erodes the foundation of your relationship and it erodes your self confidence.

The only way to repair the relationship is to re-build the foundation of trust. I recommend that you don?t try to do this alone. Whenever a core wound is involved, it?s wise to get the help and support of a trained life coach or therapist.

Trust is rebuilt one brick at a time. Here are some important components.

  1. Reliability. He does what he says he?ll do, when he says he?ll do it. He comes home on time, picks up the kids, fixes the broken cabinet? whatever it is, you trust his reliability.
  2. Love. He actively demonstrates that he still loves you. There are 5 love languages, according to author Gary Chapman. These are ways that your partner can let you know he loves you. Figure out what your primary love language is and tell him so that he will know how to show you he loves you.
  3. Communication. I feel like a broken record, but if you don?t have open, honest communication, you don?t have much of a relationship. One of the main reasons men and women have affairs in the first place is because they don?t communicate well with their partner, and that sends the relationship into disrepair. Tell him how you feel, tell him what you want from him, and expect nothing less from him.
  4. Responsibility. Each of you has to own up to your part in the breakdown of the relationship. How did you stop paying attention to each other? When did the relationship become a lower priority? What are you each willing to do to repair it?

It is possible to recover from an affair. And while sometimes relationships just run their natural course and end, more often than not, a spurned lover throws the baby out with the bathwater. Problems in relationships are never one person?s fault, and if you take the time to look at the dynamics present within your relationship, you might find that there?s still life in it. If you ditch the relationship without examining the dynamics, you?ll get to repeat the process with your next partner.

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Fulmer Named To College Football Hall of Fame (via utsportstv)

Quick hits of video, photos, quotes, chats, links and lists that you find around the web.

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The 1970 game between Alabama and USC has been heralded by many (usually Trojan fans) as the contest which lead to the integration of Crimson Tide football. It's nonsense, of course, but that hasn't stopped that version of the story from spreading by West Coast revisionists.

One reasons Tennessee fans should be disappointed with this sloppy telling of history is that it almost completely discounts a historic game involving the Vols a year earlier. 

In 1969, Lester McClain and Jackie Walker (pictured above) started in the Third Saturday in October game and broke the color line at Birmingham's Legion Field (a third black player, Andy Bennett, got into the game as well). Not only that, the Vols handed Bear Bryant's Tide team a 41-14 beatdown that afternoon.

I tell a bit of the tale at Roll Bama Roll today in my scathing review of a book about the 1970 Alabama vs. USC game, One Night, Two Teams.

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