Tuesday, April 9, 2013

How our bodies interact with our minds in response to fear and other emotions

Apr. 7, 2013 ? New research has shown that the way our minds react to and process emotions such as fear can vary according to what is happening in other parts of our bodies.

In two different presentations on April 8 at the British Neuroscience Association Festival of Neuroscience (BNA2013) in London, researchers have shown for the first time that the heart's cycle affects the way we process fear, and that a part of the brain that responds to stimuli, such as touch, felt by other parts of the body also plays a role.

Dr Sarah Garfinkel, a postdoctoral fellow at the Brighton and Sussex Medical School (Brighton, UK), told a news briefing: "Cognitive neuroscience strives to understand how biological processes interact to create and influence the conscious mind. While neural activity in the brain is typically the focus of research, there is a growing appreciation that other bodily organs interact with brain function to shape and influence our perceptions, cognitions and emotions.

"We demonstrate for the first time that the way in which we process fear is different dependent on when we see fearful images in relation to our heart."

Dr Garfinkel and her colleagues hooked up 20 healthy volunteers to heart monitors, which were linked to computers. Images of fearful faces were shown on the computers and the electrocardiography (ECG) monitors were able to communicate with the computers in order to time the presentation of the faces with specific points in the heart's cycle.

"Our results show that if we see a fearful face during systole (when the heart is pumping) then we judge this fearful face as more intense than if we see the very same fearful face during diastole (when the heart is relaxed). To look at neural activity underlying this effect, we performed this experiment in an MRI [magnetic resonance imaging] scanner and demonstrated that a part of the brain called the amygdala influences how our heart changes our perception of fear.

"From previous research, we know that if we present images very fast then we have trouble detecting them, but if an image is particularly emotional then it can 'pop' out and be seen. In a second experiment, we exploited our cardiac effect on emotion to show that our conscious experience is affected by our heart. We demonstrated that fearful faces are better detected at systole (when they are perceived as more fearful), relative to diastole. Thus our hearts can also affect what we see and what we don't see -- and can guide whether we see fear.

"Lastly, we have demonstrated that the degree to which our hearts can change the way we see and process fear is influenced by how anxious we are. The anxiety level of our individual subjects altered the extent their hearts could change the way they perceived emotional faces and also altered neural circuitry underlying heart modulation of emotion."

Dr Garfinkel says that her findings might have the potential to help people who suffer from anxiety or other conditions such as post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

"We have identified an important mechanism by which the heart and brain 'speak' to each other to change our emotions and reduce fear. We hope to explore the therapeutic implications in people with high anxiety. Anxiety disorders can be debilitating and are very prevalent in the UK and elsewhere. We hope that by increasing our understanding about how fear is processed and ways that it could be reduced, we may be able to develop more successful treatments for these people, and also for those, such as war veterans, who may be suffering from PTSD.

"In addition, there is a growing appreciation about how different forms of meditation can have therapeutic consequences. Work that integrates body, brain and mind to understand changes in emotion can help us understand how meditation and mindfulness practices can have calming effects."

In a second presentation, Dr Alejandra Sel, a postdoctoral researcher in the Department of Psychology at City University (London, UK), investigated a part of the brain called the somatosensory cortex -- the area that perceives bodily sensations, such as touch, pain, body temperature and the perception of the body's place in space, and which is activated when we observe emotional expressions in the faces of other people.

"In order to understand other's people emotions we need to experience the same observed emotions in our body. Specifically, observing an emotional face, as opposed to a neutral face, is associated with an increased activity in the somatosensory cortex as if we were expressing and experiencing our own emotions. It is also known that people with damage to the somatosensory cortex find it difficult to recognise emotion in other people's faces," Dr Sel told the news briefing.

However, until now, it has not been clear whether activity in the somatosensory cortex was simply a by-product of the way we process visual information, or whether it reacts independently to emotions expressed in other people's faces, actively contributing to how we perceive emotions in others.

In order to discover whether the somatosensory cortex contributes to the processing of emotion independently of any visual processes, Dr Sel and her colleagues tested two situations on volunteers. Using electroencephalography (EEG) to measure the brain response to images, they showed participants either a face showing fear (emotional) or a neutral face. Secondly, they combined the showing of the face with a small tap to an index finger or the left cheek immediately afterwards.

Dr Sel said: "By tapping someone's cheek or finger you can modify the 'resting state' of the somatosensory cortex inducing changes in brain electrical activity in this area. These changes are measureable and observable with EEG and this enables us to pinpoint the brain activity that is specifically related to the somatosensory cortex and its reaction to external stimuli.

"If the 'resting state' of the somatosensory cortex when a fearful face is shown has greater electrical activity than when a neutral face is shown, the changes in the activity of the somatosensory cortex induced by the taps and measured by EEG also will be greater when observing fearful as opposed to neutral faces.

"We subtracted results of the first situation (face only) from the second situation (face and tap), and compared changes in the activity related with the tap in the somatosensory cortex when seeing emotional faces versus neutral faces. This way, we could observe responses of the somatosensory cortex to emotional faces independently of visual processes," she explained.

The researchers found that there was enhanced activity in the somatosensory cortex in response to fearful faces in comparison to neutral faces, independent of any visual processes. Importantly, this activity was focused in the primary and secondary somatosensory areas; the primary area receives sensory information directly from the body, while the secondary area combines sensory information from the body with information related to body movement and other information, such as memories of previous, sensitive experiences.

"Our experimental approach allows us to isolate and show for the first time (as far as we are aware) changes in somatosensory activity when seeing emotional faces after taking away all visual information in the brain. We have shown the crucial role of the somatosensory cortex in the way our minds and bodies perceive human emotions. These findings can serve as starting point for developing interventions tailored for people with problems in recognising other's emotions, such as autistic children," said Dr Sel.

The researchers now plan to investigate whether they get similar results when people are shown faces with other expressions such as happy or angry, and whether the timing of the physical stimulus, the tap to the finger or cheek, makes any difference. In this experiment, the tap occurred 105 milliseconds after a face was shown, and Dr Sel wonders about the effect of a longer time interval.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/living_well/~3/9QgQ9vrQ8g0/130407211558.htm

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Homegrown Developers, Localization Breathe Life Into South Asian Gaming

south asiaEditor?s note:?Hassan Baig?is?an entrepreneur who runs?White Rabbit Studios, a South Asian gaming startup he founded four years ago in Pakistan. Follow him on Twitter?@baigi. It’s an open secret that the social gaming industry is no longer the cornucopia of opportunities it used to be. Rising CPAs, falling k-factors, plateuing ARPUs and channel saturation all have made life difficult for the typical gaming studio devoid of a big network of users or a deep warchest of advertising money.?But there’s a new gaming opportunity on the horizon, and the savvy tech investor will do well to take notice of it now that it’s still nascent. This opportunity is the impending mobile gaming boom in South Asia, scheduled to arrive by 2015 for all practical purposes. Read on for a thorough look at the gaming history of the region, emerging fundamentals and future expectations. Fighting Bollywood And TV Spurred by 200,000 gaming cafes popping up across the country, China witnessed an online gaming revolution in the early aughts. Facing no serious competition from traditional entertainment media heavily tethered by government censorship, gaming companies like Shanda and Giant Interactive firmly entrenched themselves in the typical gamer’s consciousness, making gaming a life-changing pastime?in China. By 2006, sensing the time had come for neighboring South Asia to take the plunge as well, India’s Reliance Entertainment released a gaming portal called Zapak. But unlike China, the response that Reliance received was lukewarm at best, and it turned out to be a stalled revolution. Zapak is still?alive today, as are?Shanda and Giant Interactive, but whereas the latter have grown to become industry leaders, Zapak never validated the business case upon which it was built. Ultimately gaming failed to take root in India because of stiff competition from the prevalent form of entertainment in the region: Bollywood and TV. Zapak’s offerings were too underdeveloped, and subsequent interest in them was too thin to displace these highly mature regional media. Thus, other than a curious fringe, Zapak never made a dent in the South Asian universe like online gaming did across the border in China. Analysts are mistaken to equate South Asia’s lackluster past performance with its potential as a mobile gaming hub. Today when mobile gaming is en route to become a $48 billion industry by 2016, South Asia is excluded from the discussion almost entirely given its tepid history. But here’s the thing: Analysts are mistaken to equate

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/C8XpiU9lA5U/

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Monday, April 8, 2013

Iterations: The Tension Between Transparency And Privacy In The Startup Ecosystem

light

Everyone wants more transparency. It is part of a deep, fundamental trend. In government. In the workplace. Inside large systems like health care. And, more recently, around early-stage startup metrics and investment data. The crowd wants more transparency. They want to know more about metrics, revenues, and stats, and they want to know more about how investment dollars are allocated. Yet, the result of this shift raises concerns about privacy. In this world of imperfect, asymmetric information, combined with the desire among participants to build up, invest in, and report on the industry itself, frustrations can mount easily because, somewhere in the recess of our minds, the game feels slightly rigged in the other person?s favor, and the light of sunshine offers a promise of transparency to perhaps root out those bad apples and, just perhaps, inject an ounce of fairness, comfort, and peace of mind in an otherwise shady world.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/f38kH_UG0Hw/

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Research Japanese gaming communities


Hello everybody.

My name is Ashwin Marapengopie and I am a Communications Student from the Netherlands. Right now I am working on my thesis about the mentality and demographics concerning Japanese gaming communities. I myself am a gamer and I also actively worked as an editor for gaming websites, so my interest in Japan and the differences concerning Europe come naturally.

I want to conduct a questionnaire via the internet among Japanese gamers. But to do that, I must first have my questionnaire translated from English to Japanese. I was wondering if anyone is willing to help me out with this. I have not found anyone yet who is able to help me, so I would really appreciate it.

What can I offer you in return? You will get an honorable mention in the 'acknowledgements' section of the report. Besides that I can also offer you a free code to an iPhone-game (for which you otherwise would have to pay, of course). And more personally; you will get my eternal gratitude for helping me out ;)

So yeah, I am curious for the replies.

Regards,
Ashwin

Source: http://www.jref.com/forum/all-things-japanese-26/research-japanese-gaming-communities-51638/

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American River Rescue: Kayaker Helps Save Family After Crash Into River

KYBURZ, Calif. ? A kayaker was being credited with helping to save a family of five after their SUV had veered off a road and ended up in a Northern California river.

The family was driving along Highway 50 near the Sierra Nevada community of Kyburz Thursday afternoon when their SUV veered off the road, hit a concrete mile marker, a large tree, a boulder and then went into the American River, Sacramento television station KCRA-TV ( ) reported. http://nbcnews.to/12ykU9j

A kayaker on the river was able to get three children ? a 4-year-old girl and two 15-year-twin girls ? out of the SUV and get them to shore, officials said.

When the kayaker ? identified as Mark Divittorio of Placerville ? went back to the SUV he found the driver with his head partly underwater and the man's wife helping to hold his head up, the station said.

"It was fortuitous that they didn't actually land on me," Divittorio told KCRA. "I was kayaking right there moments before they plunged off the cliff."

A fire crew that happened to be in the area for another call was able to get to the scene within three minutes, Mike Pott, division chief of the El Dorado County Fire Protection District, told The Associated Press.

Firefighters were able to stabilize the driver and get him and his wife out of the vehicle, which was on its side and half-submerged in the river, Pott said.

The driver, Christian Lemler, 50, of Livermore, suffered moderate to major injuries, said California Highway Patrol Sgt. Mike Poore. With the cause of the crash still under investigation, it had not been determined how fast the SUV was going when it crashed into the river. It was raining at the time, but it was not known if the weather contributed to the crash.

The other family members suffered only bumps and bruises, officials said.

"All the circumstances came together," Pott said. "Several things came together to help save this family."

The two adults and the two teens were wearing seatbelts, while the child was strapped into a car seat, Pott said.

"If they didn't have their seatbelts on I'm sure they would have all been ejected," he said.

The area where the accident took place is in rural El Dorado County, about 75 miles northeast of Sacramento.

Earlier on HuffPost:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/08/american-river-rescue_n_3034940.html

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Saturday, April 6, 2013

NFL Draft 2013: Mike Mayock ranks Eric Fisher over Luke Joeckel

Eric Fisher and Luke Joeckel will both be off the board quickly in April, but in what order? Mike Mayock thinks Fisher is the better prospect than Joeckel, who many think is the obvious No. 1 pick.

Luke Joeckel might be the top pick in the upcoming NFL Draft, but Mike Mayock doesn't think he's even the best at his position. Mayock put Eric Fisher out of Central Michigan as the top offensive tackle, the most notable shift in his latest positional rankings.

Fisher's rise from a maybe first-rounder to a probable top five pick has been pretty rapid. It's tough to show your dominance playing in the MAC - sure, Fisher wrecked most who came his way, but he very rarely faced off against NFL-caliber defensive ends, so it was tough to see what he was really capable of. But from his performance in practices at the Senior Bowl to the combine to Pro Day to team workouts, Fisher has absolutely soared.

He's got the physical capabilities -- 6'7, 306 pounds -- the athleticism -- he showed well in the broad jump and shuttle at the combine -- and as scouts have found, the natural instincts and moves of an elite left tackle prospect - perhaps better than Joeckel, a guy who's always been considered can't miss. Not bad for a guy who was just a 2-star tackle out of high school.

That doesn't mean one should expect Fisher to go first overall, as Mayock's ranking is just supposed to be an indicator of who is the better player, now where players will go. Dan Kadar's most recent mock draft still has Joeckel going first overall to Kansas City, but it would be surprising to see Fisher slip out of the top five.

The other big move on Mayock's board saw Ezekiel Ansah surpass Bjoern Werner. Both foreign-born prospects are going to be top-10 guys and are physical freaks, so perhaps its a matter of preference: Ansah's taller, with superior burst and speed suited to rushing passers from the weak side, while Werner looks to be a little bit more of a bully better built for shedding guys against the run.

One other position has a new top player, as Brian Schwenke from Cal has overtaken Travis Frederick of Wisconsin, who has fallen below Barrett Jones to No. 3.

A summary of what happened elsewhere. Mayock's whole rankings are here.

Quarterback

Up: Tyler Bray (previously unranked, now No. 5)

Down: Landry Jones (previously No. 5, now unranked)

Running back

Up: Christine Michael (previously unranked, now No. 3)

Down: Giovani Bernard, Andre Ellington, Marcus Lattimore (each dropped one spot)

WR

Up: Tavon Austin (was No. 3, now No. 2) DeAndre Hopkins (was No. 5, now No. 4) Robert Woods (previously unranked, now No. 5)

Down: Quinton Patton (was No. 4, now unranked)

Center

Up: Brian Schwenke (was No. 3, now No. 1), Barrett Jones (was No. 3, now No. 2)

Down: Travis Frederick (was No. 1, now No. 3)

Guard

Up: Kyle Long (was No. 4, now No. 3)

Down: Larry Warford (was No. 3, now No. 4)

Tackle

Up: Eric Fisher (was No. 2, now No. 1)

Down: Luke Joeckel (was No. 1, now No. 2)

4-3 defensive end

Up: Ezekiel Ansah (was No. 2, now No. 1)

Down: Bjoern Werner (was No. 1, now No. 2)

3-4 DE

Up: Datone Jones (was No. 3, now No. 2), William Gholston (was No. 5, now No. 4)

Down: Margus Hunt (was No. 2, now No. 3), Jesse Williams (was No. 4, now No. 5)

3-4 OLB

Up: Barkevious Mingo (was No. 3, now No. 2)

Down: Jamie Collins (was No. 2, now No. 3)

Cornerback

Up: Johnthan Banks (was unranked, now No. 5)

Down: Blidi Wreh-Wilson (was No. 5, now unranked)

More from SB Nation:

? 4 gay NFL players could come out on same day

? NFL mock draft: Mel Kiper predicts Geno Smith to the Eagles

? 3 reasons to draft Geno Smith

? Which QB does Cam Newton most closely resemble?

? Scouting the 'Jokers' in 2013 NFL draft

? The next step for Mankind: Mick Foley's evolution

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Source: http://www.sbnation.com/nfl-mock-draft/2013/4/5/4187930/mike-mayock-nfl-draft-board-rankings-luke-joeckel-eric-fisher

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North Korea Threatens War With U.S., Says Military "Cleared to Wage Attack"

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/04/north-korea-threatens-war-with-us-says-military-cleared-to-wage/

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