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New York Times 8-14-2017
EDITORIAL
The Hate He Dares Not Speak Of
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
White supremacists see President Trump’s failure to condemn them as a sign of implicit support. Which of course it is.
Comments
EDITORIAL
Before You Rip Up That Iran Deal …
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The point is to curb its nuclear weapons program. Other issues, no matter how serious, can be handled separately.
PAUL KRUGMAN
When the President Is Un-American
Trumpism is a betrayal of our national identity.
Comments
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Single Payer or Bust?
By MICHAEL TOMASKY
Democrats should pause before making radical health care reform a litmus test.
Comments
THE STONE
Christianity Does Not Justify Trump’s ‘Fire and Fury’
By STEVEN PAULIKAS
The Rev. Robert Jeffress promoted a twisted theology that fetishizes violence.
Comments
ON CAMPUS
The ‘Free Speech’ Hypocrisy of Right-Wing Media
By KEEANGA-YAMAHTTA TAYLOR
Conservatives are obsessed with protecting “free speech,” but only the kind they agree with.
LETTERS
The Open Wounds of Charlottesville
Readers discuss the riot and President Trump’s failure to quickly condemn the violence.
LETTER
Low-Skilled Immigrants?
A reader disagrees with changing the legal immigration system to reduce the supply of “low skilled” workers.
LETTER
Preventing Running Injuries
A reader suggests ways for runners to reduce the risk of injuries.
LETTER
Canary in the Coal Mine
The problem with the industry is not a regulatory one, a reader writes.
OP-ED CONTRIBUTORS
Guam, America’s Forgotten Front Line
By NEIL WEARE and RODNEY CRUZ
North Korea knows the island territory is critical to the United States. Too bad most Americans don’t.
RED CENTURY
Why Women Had Better Sex Under Socialism
By KRISTEN R. GHODSEE
Yes, there was repression behind the Iron Curtain. But it wasn’t sexual.
FRANK BRUNI
President Trump Cannot Redeem Himself
His new words on Charlottesville — muted and late — weren’t enough.
Comments
LETTER
The Voices of Women in the Courtroom
Readers offer further suggestions for increasing the participation of female lawyers.
LETTER
Juveniles and Solitary Confinement
A psychiatrist says the abolition of punitive isolation for young offenders is long overdue.
LETTER
A Mother’s Challenges
A lawyer and mother points out the challenges she faced during and after pregnancy.
LETTERS
Christianity and Politics in America
An Op-Ed article discussing “the slide toward secularism” draws responses from readers.
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Why the Nazis Came to Charlottesville
By SIVA VAIDHYANATHAN
And why I was wrong not to confront them.
Comments
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Gandhi Won’t Leave India
By GOPALKRISHNA GANDHI
Mahatma Gandhi’s legacy faces the challenge of neglect, obfuscation and co-option in contemporary India.
OPINION
A Mad-Libbing President Is Mute on Neo-Nazis
By BARI WEISS
Trump’s words often provoke outrage. The latest outrage comes from what he wouldn’t say.
The four features below have received nominations for the 2017 News and Documentary Emmy Awards.
OP-DOCS
‘The Voter Suppression Trail’
By CHRIS BAKER, BRIAN MOORE and MIKE LACHER
Find out if your vote can survive the great, flawed adventure of American democracy.
OP-DOCS
The Click Effect
By SANDY SMOLAN
Dive under the sea and listen to the language of dolphins and whales in virtual reality.
PAMELA DRUCKERMAN
‘If I Sleep for an Hour, 30 People Will Die’
A World War II hero saved the lives of rebels and refugees. Now it’s our turn.
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
Why Is the Plight of ‘Comfort Women’ Still So Controversial?
By ILARIA MARIA SALA
Wartime sex slavery isn’t a thorny issue just for Japan. In South Korea, it’s still taboo.
‘At the Stroke of Midnight My Entire Family Was Displaced’
Seventy years ago, millions of people were uprooted as British India was carved up along religious and political lines. Here are some of their stories.
EDITORIAL
The Real Suspense in Kenya
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
The presidential election was close, but hanging over it has been the question of whether violence would spiral out of control.
EDITORIAL
Mr. Macron’s Homefront Flub
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD
He has better things to do than to make “first lady” an official government position.
SHMUEL ROSNER
Netanyahu’s Fate Doesn’t Determine Israel’s Future
So why do so many Israelis think it does?
ON CAMPUS
What U.Va. Students Saw in Charlottesville
“The alt-right rally,” said one student, “had nothing to do with a statue. It was about intimidation.”
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR
What Trump Got Wrong on Charlottesville
By ERICK-WOODS ERICKSON
This weekend evil has a name, and it is white supremacy.
Comments
MICHAEL ERIC DYSON
Charlottesville and the Bigotocracy
It is disheartening for black folk to see such a vile and despicable replay of history.
OPINION
When Lady Liberty Triggers Trump Supporters
By TARIRO MZEZEWA
A Breitbart editor feels attacked by the most iconic American symbol.
Vietnam ’67: A Newsletter About the War
Examining America’s long war in Southeast Asia through the course of a single year.
What Coffee Does to the Heart, Brain, & Body – Dr. Alan Mandell D.C.
Funny Babies Dancing Compilation 2017
Washington Post evening edition 8-14-2017
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Nitric Oxide Dump Exercise with nose breathing to lower blood pressure and thin blood
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John Oliver – White Supremacist Rally
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Cognitive Abilities Seem to Reinforce Each Other in Adolescence
Summary: A new study reports cognitive abilities mutually assist each other during development. This results in improved cognitive skills and general intelligence over time.
Source: APS .
One of the most striking findings in psychology is that almost all cognitive abilities are positively related – on average, people who are better at a skill like reasoning are generally also better at a skill like vocabulary. This fact allows scientists and educational practitioners to summarize people’s skills on a wide range of domains as one factor – often called ‘g’, for ‘general intelligence’. Despite this, the mechanisms underlying ‘g’ and its development remain somewhat mysterious.
“What this so-called ‘g-factor’ means is still very much up for debate,” explains researcher Rogier Kievit of the Cognition and Brain Science Unit at the University of Cambridge. “Is it a causal factor, an artefact of the way we create cognitive tests, the result of our educational environment, a consequence of genetics, an emergent phenomenon of a dynamic system or perhaps all of these things to varying degrees?”
In a new study, scientists from Cambridge, London, and Berlin led by Kievit directly compared different proposed explanations for the phenomenon of ‘g’ and how it develops over time. Data was used from a Wellcome-funded longitudinal cohort (NSPN), where 785 late adolescents, ages 14 to 24, were tested on two occasions approximately 1.5 years apart. They focused two subtests reflecting key domains of ‘g’, namely fluid reasoning (solving abstract puzzles) and vocabulary (knowing the definitions of words). Their findings are published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
The team observed that the best explanation for the improvement in skills over time was the so-called ‘mutualism’ model. This model proposes that cognitive abilities help each other during development: In other words, better reasoning skills allow individuals to improve their vocabulary more quickly, and better vocabularies are associated with faster improvement in reasoning ability.
These findings are crucial to our understanding of cognitive abilities, as they suggest that small differences early on in childhood may lead to larger differences later on, and help partially explain how ‘g’ arises.
The work has implications for important outcomes in adolescence.
“Our findings may be relevant for early detection of developmental challenges,” says Kievit. “Often screening tests for difficulties focus only on individual outcomes (i.e., ‘Is a child achieving the desired level on some test?’), but studying the dynamics between cognitive domains is likely to paint a richer, more accurate picture of the expected trajectory of development.”
And the findings may also shed light on more long-term life outcomes.
“General cognitive ability is strikingly predictive of various important life outcomes ranging from academic and professional success, to mental and physical health and even longevity – to understand why this is so, we must better understand what this g-factor really is,” Kievit explains.
The researchers note that their observations regarding links between cognitive abilities are exciting, but they do not address whether the relationships are directly causal in nature.
“We hope to further tease apart the underlying mechanisms in future work,” Kievit concludes.
Co-authors on the research include: Ulman Lindenberger (Max Planck Institute for Human Development); Ian Goodyer, Peter B. Jones, and Ed T. Bullmore (University of Cambridge); Peter Fonagy (University College London); the Neuroscience in Psychiatry Network; and Raymond J. Dolan (Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research).
Funding: The Neuroscience in Psychiatry Network is supported by a strategic award from the Wellcome Trust to the University of Cambridge and University College London (095844/Z/11/Z). R. A. Kievit is supported by the Wellcome Trust (Grant No. 107392/Z/15/Z) and the UK Medical Research Council (MCA060-5PR61). P. Fonagy is funded by a National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Senior Investigator Award (NF-SI- 0514-10157). P. Fonagy was in part supported by the NIHR Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRC) North Thames at Barts Health National Health Service (NHS) Trust. The views expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NHS, the NIHR, or the UK Department of Health.
Source: Anna Mikulak – APS
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is adapted from the APS news release.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Mutualistic Coupling Between Vocabulary and Reasoning Supports Cognitive Development During Late Adolescence and Early Adulthood” by Rogier A. Kievit, Ulman Lindenberger, Ian M. Goodyer, Peter B. Jones, Peter Fonagy, Edward T. Bullmore, the Neuroscience in Psychiatry Network, and Raymond J. Dolan in Psychological Science. Published online August 8 2017 doi:10.1177/0956797617710785
<http://neurosciencenews.com/neurodevelopment-cognition-7299 />.
Abstract
Mutualistic Coupling Between Vocabulary and Reasoning Supports Cognitive Development During Late Adolescence and Early Adulthood
One of the most replicable findings in psychology is the positive manifold: the observation that individual differences in cognitive abilities are universally positively correlated. Investigating the developmental origin of the positive manifold is crucial to understanding it.
In a large longitudinal cohort of adolescents and young adults (N = 785; n = 566 across two waves, mean interval between waves = 1.48 years; age range = 14–25 years), we examined developmental changes in two core cognitive domains, fluid reasoning and vocabulary.
We used bivariate latent change score models to compare three leading accounts of cognitive development: g-factor theory, investment theory, and mutualism.
We showed that a mutualism model, which proposes that basic cognitive abilities directly and positively interact during development, provides the best account of developmental changes.
We found that individuals with higher scores in vocabulary showed greater gains in matrix reasoning and vice versa. These dynamic coupling pathways are not predicted by other accounts and provide a novel mechanistic window into cognitive development.
“Mutualistic Coupling Between Vocabulary and Reasoning Supports Cognitive Development During Late Adolescence and Early Adulthood” by Rogier A. Kievit, Ulman Lindenberger, Ian M. Goodyer, Peter B. Jones, Peter Fonagy, Edward T. Bullmore, the Neuroscience in Psychiatry Network, and Raymond J. Dolan in Psychological Science. Published online August 8 2017 doi:10.1177/0956797617710785
Secret to Happiness May Include More Unpleasant Emotions
Source: American Psychological Association.
Research contradicts idea that people should always seek pleasure to be happy.
People may be happier when they feel the emotions they desire, even if those emotions are unpleasant, such as anger or hatred, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.
“Happiness is more than simply feeling pleasure and avoiding pain. Happiness is about having experiences that are meaningful and valuable, including emotions that you think are the right ones to have,” said lead researcher Maya Tamir, PhD, a psychology professor at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. “All emotions can be positive in some contexts and negative in others, regardless of whether they are pleasant or unpleasant.”
The cross-cultural study included 2,324 university students in eight countries: the United States, Brazil, China, Germany, Ghana, Israel, Poland and Singapore. The research, which was published online in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, is the first study to find this relationship between happiness and experiencing desired emotions, even when those emotions are unpleasant, Tamir said.
Participants generally wanted to experience more pleasant emotions and fewer unpleasant emotions than they felt in their lives, but that wasn’t always the case. Interestingly, 11 percent of the participants wanted to feel fewer transcendent emotions, such as love and empathy, than they experienced in daily life, and 10 percent wanted to feel more unpleasant emotions, such as anger or hatred. There was only a small overlap between those groups.
For example, someone who feels no anger when reading about child abuse might think she should be angrier about the plight of abused children, so she wants to feel more anger than she actually does in that moment, Tamir said. A woman who wants to leave an abusive partner but isn’t willing to do so may be happier if she loved him less, Tamir said.
Participants were surveyed about the emotions they desired and the emotions they actually felt in their lives. They also rated their life satisfaction and depressive symptoms. Across cultures in the study, participants who experienced more of the emotions that they desired reported greater life satisfaction and fewer depressive symptoms, regardless of whether those desired emotions were pleasant or unpleasant. Further research is needed, however, to test whether feeling desired emotions truly influences happiness or is merely associated with it, Tamir said.
The study assessed only one category of unpleasant emotions known as negative self-enhancing emotions, which includes hatred, hostility, anger and contempt. Future research could test other unpleasant emotions, such as fear, guilt, sadness or shame, Tamir said. Pleasant emotions that were examined in the study included empathy, love, trust, passion, contentment and excitement. Prior research has shown that the emotions that people desire are linked to their values and cultural norms, but those links weren’t directly examined in this research.
The study may shed some light on the unrealistic expectations that many people have about their own feelings, Tamir said.
“People want to feel very good all the time in Western cultures, especially in the United States,” Tamir said. “Even if they feel good most of the time, they may still think that they should feel even better, which might make them less happy overall.””
Brain Injury in Kids Might Lead to Alcohol Abuse
Traumatic brain injuries in children and adolescents could lead to alcohol abuse in later life.
Researchers at Ohio State University have surveyed previous studies to investigate the relationship between traumatic brain injuries and alcohol abuse. They found evidence that traumatic brain injuries in children and adolescents could be a risk-factor for alcohol abuse in later life.
When we think of the link between alcohol and traumatic brain injuries, we probably think of a person’s increased risk of injury while drunk. Alcohol intoxication is indeed a significant risk factor for traumatic brain injuries, and one study has reported that alcohol use is involved in as many as 50% of emergency department admissions for traumatic brain injuries in the US.
Intriguingly, an animal study conducted by Zachary Weil, a researcher at Ohio State University, made him suspect that the converse might also be true, particularly in young people. “We recently reported that mice that experience a traumatic brain injury as juveniles drink significantly more alcohol as adults,” says Weil. “When we started to look at the human literature it became clear that alcohol and traumatic brain injuries were very connected. There were some hints that brain injuries might actually make someone more susceptible to alcohol abuse.”
Weil was inspired to look more closely at the past literature, and what he and his team found was recently published in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. The researchers found that it was difficult to tell if their hypothesis was true in adults. “So many adults that have brain injuries are already heavy drinkers and therefore it’s really hard to tell for sure if a brain injury has affected their drinking,” explains Weil.
However, for people who suffer a traumatic brain injury in childhood or adolescence, there was a clearer link to alcohol abuse problems in later life. For example, children under 5 years of age who suffer a traumatic brain injury are over 3.6 times more likely to exhibit substance abuse as teenagers, compared with uninjured children.
So, why would a traumatic brain injury potentially lead to alcohol abuse? The team found evidence in the literature that brain injury can negatively affect factors that are associated with reducing alcohol abuse. For example, forming stable romantic relationships, getting involved in extracurricular activities and maintaining full-time employment are all associated with a reduced risk of substance abuse, but all are less likely in brain injury survivors.
Traumatic brain injuries can also make people more impulsive and less aware of the consequences of their actions, and there is also evidence that brain injury survivors may use alcohol to help deal with the negative consequences of their injury.
Beyond its psychological effects, traumatic brain injury can cause significant inflammation in the brain. Alcohol also generates neuroinflammation, and evidence from animal studies suggests that this inflammation might drive further drinking.
Finally, traumatic brain injuries can damage specific neurochemical systems in the brain that are vulnerable during childhood development, such as the dopaminergic system. A dysfunctional dopaminergic system is a risk factor for substance abuse, suggesting another potential link between childhood brain injury and alcohol abuse in adulthood.
So, how can we address the problem? “This is an important issue because drinking after brain injury is associated with health problems and poorer outcomes. Specifically targeting substance abuse problems in the brain-injured population could do a lot of good,” says Weil.
The researchers caution that the link between brain injuries and alcohol abuse has not yet been completely established and more work is needed. “This has not been completely confirmed in humans, but there is a lot of suggestive evidence,” explains Weil.
Funding: The study was funded by National Institutes of Health, Huron Foundation, Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center Neuroscience Program.
Source: Melissa Cochrane – Frontiers
Image Source: NeuroscienceNews.com image is in the public domain.
Original Research: Full open access research for “Traumatic Brain Injuries during Development: Implications for Alcohol Abuse” by Zachary M. Weil and Kate Karelina in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. Published online July 20 2017 doi:10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00135
<http://neurosciencenews.com/alcohol-addiction-tbi-7297/>.
Abstract
Traumatic Brain Injuries during Development: Implications for Alcohol Abuse
Traumatic brain injuries are strongly related to alcohol intoxication as by some estimates half or more of all brain injuries involve at least one intoxicated individual.
Additionally, there is mounting evidence that traumatic brain injuries can themselves serve as independent risk factors for the development of alcohol use disorders, particularly when injury occurs during juvenile or adolescent development.
Here, we will review the epidemiological and experimental evidence for this phenomenon and discuss potential psychosocial mediators including attenuation of negative affect and impaired decision making as well as neurochemical mediators including disruption in the glutamatergic, GABAergic, and dopaminergic signaling pathways and increases in inflammation.
“Traumatic Brain Injuries during Development: Implications for Alcohol Abuse” by Zachary M. Weil and Kate Karelina in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience. Published online July 20 2017 doi:10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00135
Do you think Republicans are corrupt?
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Connie — Big Money Republicans are absolutely CORRUPT:
They control Congress.
They control the Supreme Court.
And they control the White House.
Thanks to corrupt GOP billionaires, our Democracy is rigged to benefit the rich and well-connected.
We need to know who we can count on to take down corrupt Republicans.
C. Dello Buono → please complete our poll right now:
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Kindly let us know today:
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