October 24, 2013
Mohenjo
Science
Aging Clock, amazon, Biological Clock Dna, Biological Clock Hidden In Dna, Biological Clock Human Genome, business, Business News, cells and tissues, Dna Body Clock, DNA methylation, Epigenetic Clock, Epigenetic Clock Dna, Health, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, internal biological clock, Internal Clock Dna, mental-health, research, Science, Science News, Slideshow, Smarter Ideas, Steve Horvath, technology, Technology News, The Huffington Post, travel, vacation, Video
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The age on your driver’s license may not be exactly correct — well, for certain parts of your body anyway.
A new study, published Monday in peer-reviewed journal Genome Biology, suggests that we all have an internal biological clock that tracks the aging process — and may reveal the true age of our cells and tissues. It’s hidden right in our DNA.
“The epigenetic clock really allows someone to objectively measure the age of cells and tissues,” study author Dr. Steve Horvath, a professor of human genetics and biostatistics at the University of California, Los Angeles, told The Huffington Post. “Therefore, it can be used to study aging.”
This internal “timepiece” may also be used to compare the various ages of elements in the body. For instance, in his research, Horvath found that female breast tissue ages several years faster than the rest of the body, which may explain why breast cancer is the most common cancer in women. Cancer also greatly accelerates the age of affected tissues.
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October 24, 2013
Mohenjo
Science
amazon, Ancient Human Skull, anthropology, Archaeology, biology, business, Business News, Daily Discovery, evolution, Health, Homo erectus, Homo ergaster, Homo habilis, Homo sapiens, Hotels, huffingtonpost, Human Ancestors, Human Evolution, human family tree, Human Skull Georgia, human species, human-rights, mental-health, Paleontology, Prehistoric Skull, Prehistory, research, Science, Science News, Skull 5, Skull 5 Humans, Slideshow, Smarter Ideas, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Video
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The earliest, now-extinct human lineages, once thought to be multiple species, may actually have been one species, researchers now controversially suggest.
Modern humans, Homo sapiens, are the only living member of the human lineage, Homo, which is thought to have arisen in Africa about 2 million years ago at the beginning of the ice age, also referred to as the Pleistocene Epoch. Many extinct human species were thought to once roam the Earth, such as Homo habilis, suspected to be among the first stone-tool makers; the relatively larger-brained Homo rudolfensis; the relatively slender Homo ergaster; and Homo erectus, the first to regularly keep tools it made.
To learn more about the roots of the human family tree, scientists investigated a completely intact, approximately 1.8-million-year-old skull excavated from the medieval hilltop town of Dmanisi in the Republic of Georgia. Archaeological excavations there about 30 years ago unexpectedly revealed that Dmanisi is one of the oldest-known sites for ancient human species out of Africa and the most complete collection of Homo erectus skulls and jaws found so far. The world’s largest, extinct cheetah species once lived in the area, and scientists cannot rule out whether it fed on these early humans.
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An artist’s conception revealing what “Skull 5” may have looked like some 1.8 million years ago when he (the scientists suspect the remains come from a male) lived.
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October 24, 2013
Mohenjo
Human Interest
amazon, Barneys, Barneys Lawsuit, Barneys New York, Black Voices News, business, Business News, Christian, Fashion & Beauty, Fashion Racism, Health, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Manhattan Supreme Court, mental-health, Michael Palillo, New York Police Department, Racial Discrimination, Racial Profiling, Racism, research, Salvatore Ferragamo, Salvatore Ferragamo Belt, Science, Science News, Slideshow, technology, Technology News, travel, Trayon Christian, vacation, Video
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UPDATE:
Barneys has posted a response on their Facebook page, providing clarification about employee participation in the incident.
Barneys New York and the New York Police Department have been slapped with a lawsuit by Trayon Christian, a college student from Queens, who was arrested at the luxury department store in April.
“His only crime was being a young black man,” Michael Palillo, Christian’s attorney, told The New York Post.
The Post reports that the 19-year-old was at the store buying a $350 Salvatore Ferragamo belt, but following the purchase, he was stopped by undercover officers that were allegedly called on by a Barneys sales clerk who believed the transaction was fraudulent.
The lawsuit, which was filed Tuesday in Manhattan Supreme Court, states that the NYC College of Technology freshman was asked by the cops: “how a young black man such as himself could afford to purchase such an expensive belt?” He was then handcuffed taken to a local precinct.
Despite showing the officers the receipt for the belt, his ID and the debit card used, “Christian was told that his identification was false and that he could not afford to make such an expensive purchase,” Palillo said.
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October 23, 2013
Mohenjo
Crime
amazon, business, Business News, Crime News, Geno Martini, Health, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Jose Cazares, Marine Michael Landsberry, medicine, mental-health, Michael Landsberry, Mike Mieras, Nevada middle school campus, Pedro Martinez, politics, research, School Shootings, Science, Science News, Serial Killers, Slideshow, Sparks Middle School Shooter, Sparks Middle School Shooting, technology, Technology News, Tom Miller, travel, vacation, Video, Washoe County School District
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The 12-year-old student who opened fire on a Nevada middle school campus, wounding two classmates and killing a teacher before he turned the gun on himself, got the weapon from his home, authorities said Tuesday.
Washoe County School District police said they are still working to determine how the boy obtained the 9mm semi-automatic Ruger handgun used in the Monday morning spree at Sparks Middle School. The boy’s parents are cooperating with authorities and could face charges in the case, police said.
Authorities say they’re withholding the seventh-grader’s name out of respect for his family.
At a news conference Tuesday, law enforcement and school officials again lauded the actions of 45-year-old math teacher and former Marine Michael Landsberry, who tried to stop the rampage before he was killed.
“I cannot express enough appreciation for Mr. Landsberry,” Washoe County School District Superintendent Pedro Martinez said. “He truly is a hero.”
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October 23, 2013
Mohenjo
Crime
amazon, business, Business News, Coleman, Crime News, Daisy, Daisy Coleman, Daisy Coleman Rape Case, Daisy Coleman Sex Assault, Health, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Melinda Coleman, mental-health, national spotlight, Nodaway County Missouri, research, Rob Rice Nodaway County Prosecuting Attorney, Science, Science News, Slideshow, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Video
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After nearly two years of hardship and four days under the national spotlight, Daisy Coleman finally received some good news.
“I was more than excited. I felt like I was going to be able to work with someone who would put forth a real effort,” Coleman told reporters on Wednesday after the Nodaway County, Mo., prosecuting attorney announced that he would seek a special prosecutor to review the dropped charges against a former high school football player accused of sexually assaulting her in 2012.
Daisy’s case received widespread attention following a poignant feature published in the Kansas City Star. “Nightmare In Maryville” describes the struggles endured by Coleman, questions how officials handled the investigation and highlights one of the suspects’ political connections.
“Just to have people listen and look at it with an objective eye is huge for us because we haven’t had that until this point,” said Melinda Coleman, Daisy’s mother, according to KSHB.
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KSHB
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October 22, 2013
Mohenjo
Technical
amazon, business, Business News, Driving Ingenuity, headphones, Health, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Jason Hardi, mental-health, Mike Sacks, Music Sharing, Muzik, Muzik Headphones, research, Science, Science News, Sharing Music, Smart Headphones, Social Headphones, Social Music, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Video
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Normally, people isolate themselves from the rest of the world when they put earbuds on and listen to music. But a new pair of headphones just made the experience a lot more social.
Jason Hardi, chief executive of headphone maker Muzik, talked with HuffPost Live’s Mike Sacks about his company’s latest pair of headphones, which let you share songs you’re listening to by tapping on its side.
“They’re the only headphones in the world that let you literally share the song as you’re listening to it with Facebook, with Twitter, to your followers or save it to a playlist just by holding the hot keys,” Hardi said.
His hope is that the headphones will reinvigorate the practice of sharing great music with friends and family.
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October 20, 2013
Mohenjo
Business
Air Jordan, Air Jordans, amazon, Bloomberg, business, Business News, Ebay Air Yeezy II, eBay auction, Giuseppe Zanotti, Hotels, House Of Borgezie, huffingtonpost, human-rights, Kanye West, Kanye West Design, Lebron James, mental-health, Most Expensive Basketball Shoes, Nike Air Yeezy, Nike Air Yeezy II, Nike Basketball Shoes, research, Science, Science News, Slideexpand, Slideshow, Stuart Weitzman, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation, Video
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They may be beautiful. They may be dark. But the fact that someone was twisted enough to pay $93,000 for them — that’s not a fantasy.
You guessed it, we’re talking about a pair of Nike Air Yeezy II sneakers designed by rapper Kanye West that, yes, fetched almost $100,000 on eBay Wednesday, according to USA Today (h/t Bloomberg). Set for “limited” release to the public Saturday, the shoes, similar to those already worn by West collaborator Jay-Z and Miami Heat sensation Lebron James, are highly anticipated. Yet it’s hard to ignore the fact that bids for other pairs of the same shoes aren’t exceeding $3,000.
Still, basketball shoes selling in the five-figure range isn’t unheard of. A pair of limited edition silver Air Jordans sold for $60,000 at an eBay auction in June 2011, according to BornRich. Likewise, diamond studded Nike Air Force 1s reportedly went for $50,000, while purchasing one of 12 pairs of signed Air Jordan I shoes will set you back $25,000.
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October 20, 2013
Mohenjo
Arts
amazon, arts, Arts News, Black Artists, Black Hair, Black Hair White Women, Black Hairstyles, business, Business News, Can i Touch It?, corporate appearance, corporate sphere, Endia Beal, Endia Beal Art, Endia Beal Photography, Female Artists, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, mental-health, Minorities In Workplace, photography, research, Science, Science News, technology, Technology News, travel, vacation
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Almost every woman has toiled before the mirror, trying desperately to look “professional.” Photographer Endia Beal explored this frustration that occurs so often in the corporate sphere, this feeling of otherness that asks women, quite simply, to change. For minority women this change is often far more difficult, as the ideal corporate appearance remains, in most cases, the white male.
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October 19, 2013
Mohenjo
Medical
amazon, business, Business News, Charles Dickens, Cookie Experiment, Emotional Intelligence, Health, Healthy Living News, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, medicine, mental-health, Psychological Experiments, Psychological Studies, research, Robbers Cave Experiment, Science, Science News, Self Understanding, Slideshow, Stanford Prison Experiments, Stanley Milgram, technology, Technology News, The Third Metric, travel, vacation, Wisdom
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Why do we do the things we do? Despite our best attempts to “know thyself,” the truth is that we often know astonishingly little about our own minds, and even less about the way others think. As Charles Dickens once put it, “A wonderful fact to reflect upon, that every human creature is constituted to be that profound secret and mystery to every other.”
Psychologists have long sought insights into how we perceive the world and what motivates our behavior, and they’ve made enormous strides in lifting that veil of mystery. Aside from providing fodder for stimulating cocktail-party conversations, some of the most famous psychological experiments of the past century reveal universal and often surprising truths about human nature.
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October 19, 2013
Mohenjo
Medical
amazon, business, Business News, Health, Healthy Living News, Hotels, huffingtonpost, human-rights, medicine, melanoma cells, mental-health, Michael Nicholl, radiation treatment, research, Resveratrol, Resveratrol Cancer, Resveratrol Health, Resveratrol Radiation, Resveratrol Radiation Melanoma, Science, Science News, Slideshow, technology, Technology News, travel, University of Missouri School of Medicine, vacation
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Resveratrol, a compound found in red wine and red grape skins, could make radiation treatment for cancer more effective, a new study suggests.
Researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine found that treating melanoma cells with resveratrol in a lab setting made them more susceptible to radiation.
“We’ve seen glimmers of possibilities, and it seems that resveratrol could potentially be very important in treating a variety of cancers,” study researcher Michael Nicholl, M.D., an assistant professor of surgery at the university, said in a statement. “It comes down to how to administer the resveratrol. If we can develop a successful way to deliver the compound to tumor sites, resveratrol could potentially be used to treat many types of cancers. Melanoma is very tricky due to the nature of how the cancer cells travel throughout the body, but we envision resveratrol could be combined with radiation to treat symptomatic metastatic tumors, which can develop in the brain or bone.”
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