Monday, 29 April 2013

Singing humpback whales tracked on Northwest Atlantic feeding ground

Apr. 29, 2013 ? Male humpback whales sing complex songs in tropical waters during the winter breeding season, but they also sing at higher latitudes at other times of the year. NOAA researchers have provided the first detailed description linking humpback whale movements to acoustic behavior on a feeding ground in the Northwest Atlantic.

Findings from the study, published April 10 in the journal PLOS ONE, demonstrate the potential applications of passive acoustic tracking and monitoring for marine mammal conservation and management.

Co-author Sofie Van Parijs, who heads the passive acoustics group at the Woods Hole Laboratory of NOAA's Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC), says this study is not so much about biology, but about acoustic methods.

"We have monitored and acoustically recorded whale sounds for years, and are now able to 'mine' these data using new computer software applications and methods, " said Van Parijs. "Passive acoustic tracking has enabled us to localize humpback whale song to study the movements of individual whales, and to relate the singing to specific behaviors. This has never before been accomplished for singing humpbacks on a northwest Atlantic feeding ground."

"Passive acoustic tracking of humpback whales and other cetacean species provides an opportunity to collect data on movement patterns that are difficult?or impossible?to obtain using other techniques," said lead author Joy Stanistreet, who worked with Van Parjis and co-author Denise Risch at the NEFSC's Woods Hole Laboratory at the time of the study. Stanistreet is currently a graduate student at the Duke University Marine Laboratory in Beaufort, N.C.

Since 2007, NEFSC researchers have used year-round passive acoustic monitoring to study ocean noise in the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, a feeding ground for humpback whales and other marine mammal species in the southern Gulf of Maine. Humpback whales typically frequent the sanctuary between April and December and feed on sand lance and other small schooling fish. Humpback whale singing in the sanctuary usually occurs from April through May, following the spring migration from southern waters, and from August to December before the return fall migration. During the summer, humpbacks remain in the sanctuary but generally do not sing while they feed.

The researchers used data from acoustic recordings collected from an array of 10 bottom-mounted marine autonomous recording units (MARUs). Continuous 24-hour recordings units were deployed in the sanctuary for four consecutive three-month periods during 2009. The MARUs were placed three to six miles apart, and the arrays shifted seasonally to areas within the sanctuary having high whale concentrations.

Humpback whale songs were recorded in distinct time periods during spring and fall. No songs were recorded during summer and winter, although humpback whales remained in the area. Songs were most common in the spring, and occurrences of singing increased significantly before and after migration periods.

Forty-three song sessions, each lasting from 30 minutes to eight hours, were used to track individual singing whales. Most of the singers were actively swimming; the patterns and rates of their movement ranged from slow meandering to a faster directional movement. In one case, two singers were tracked at the same time, suggesting a potential reaction by one singer to the presence of the other.

Marine mammal researchers could also use passive acoustic localization and tracking methods to better understand the geographic distribution, abundance, and densities of cetacean species, many of which are threatened by human activities. These applications may help inform and enhance marine mammal conservation and management efforts

The study was funded by the National Oceanographic Partnership Program, a collaboration of federal agencies that provides leadership and coordination of national oceanographic research and education initiatives.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by NOAA Fisheries Northeast Fisheries Science Center.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Joy E. Stanistreet, Denise Risch, Sofie M. Van Parijs. Passive Acoustic Tracking of Singing Humpback Whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) on a Northwest Atlantic Feeding Ground. PLoS ONE, 2013; 8 (4): e61263 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0061263

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

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_environment/~3/L3nWxW_qmvI/130429133658.htm

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NBA's Michael Jordan marries ex-model over weekend

Michael Jordan got married over the weekend, with Tiger Woods, Spike Lee and Patrick Ewing among those attending the NBA Hall of Famer's wedding in Palm Beach, Fla.

Jordan married 35-year-old former model Yvette Prieto on Saturday, manager Estee Portnoy told The Associated Press on Sunday.

The 50-year-old Jordan owns the Charlotte Bobcats.

Nearly 300 guests were present as they exchanged vows. The reception took place at a private golf club in Jupiter designed by Jack Nicklaus. Jordan owns a home near the course.

Entertainment included DJ MC Lyte, singers K'Jon, Robin Thicke and Grammy Award winner Usher and The Source, an 18-piece band.

The six-time NBA champion and Prieto met five years ago and were engaged last December.

Jordan had three children with former wife Juanita Vanoy. The couple's divorce was finalized in December 2006.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nbas-michael-jordan-marries-ex-model-over-weekend-024122152.html

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Olympia Circuits' Arno Shield lets Arduino newcomers bring their own board

Olympia Circuits' Arno Shield lets Arduino newcomers bring their own board

While there have certainly been attempts at easing the Arduino learning curve, many of these still demand a new board or simplify just one aspect of a much larger universe. Olympia Circuits' new Arno Shield could help strike a better balance between starting fresh and diving into the deep end. It includes all the buttons, lights and sensors needed for 40-plus educational projects, but grafts on to existing boards such as the company's LeOlympia or an Arduino Uno. Owners don't have to add parts or wires; they just remove the shield once they've learned enough to create their own masterworks. The shield kit won't be cheap when it arrives on May 2nd for $60, but it may prove the real bargain for tinkerers who want a full-fledged Arduino board as soon as the training wheels come off.

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Source: Olympia Circuits

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/29/olympia-circuits-arno-shield-lets-arduino-newcomers-byob/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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The iPhone Is One of the Best Android Phones You Can Buy

The addition of Google Now to the iOS App Store has granted iPhone owners access to one of Google's most useful products. But it did something else, too. It made the iPhone a better Android phone than the vast majority of Android phones you can buy.

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Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/Ip1iOdaDDVI/the-iphone-is-one-of-the-best-android-phones-you-can-bu-484580304

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efemr Is Snapchat For Twitter Which Can Only End Well

So yeah, efemr is a web app that scrubs tweets after the amount of time you hashtag. Want a tweet gone after five minutes? #5m. Two hours? #2h. You get the gist.

The usual retweet concerns still apply, but if no one interacts with the tweet while it's up, it will pretty much disappear when you tell it to. You just have to connect your Twitter account with efemr so it can do all the dirty work.

If you're looking for peace of mind about every foray into social media or you want to say wildly offensive things and then deny that you said them, efemr might help you achieve some goals. It could even become popular for something like contests/scavenger hunts on Twitter. And people have obviously taken to Snapchat. But the retweet issue really gets in the way. The whole point of Twitter is that anything popular, interesting or salacious will be shared. If you're gonna go out on a limb you should stand up and be proud. Or, you know, apologize profusely and blame it on scheduled tweets. [The Verge]

Source: http://gizmodo.com/5995491/efemr-is-snapchat-for-twitter-which-can-only-end-well

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Sunday, 28 April 2013

USC's Barkley, 3 other QBs picked in 4th round

FILE - In this Oct. 13, 2012, file photo, Southern California's Matt Barkley throws a pass against Washington during an NCAA college football game in Seattle. Barkley was chosen with the 98th overall pick in the fourth round of the NFL draft by the Philadelphia Eagles on Saturday, April 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)

FILE - In this Oct. 13, 2012, file photo, Southern California's Matt Barkley throws a pass against Washington during an NCAA college football game in Seattle. Barkley was chosen with the 98th overall pick in the fourth round of the NFL draft by the Philadelphia Eagles on Saturday, April 27, 2013. (AP Photo/Elaine Thompson, File)

FILE - In this Nov. 17, 2012, file photo, Syracuse quarterback Ryan Nassib throws a pass during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Missouri in Columbia, Mo. Nassib was drafted by the New York Giants in the fourth round of the NFL Draft on Saturday, April 27, 2013. (AP Photo/L.G. Patterson, File)

Shawn Farhadian, 12, of Tuxedo Park, N.Y., keeps his fingers crossed as a New York Giants' draft pick is announced during the fourth round of the NFL Draft, Saturday, April 27, 2013 at Radio City Music Hall in New York. Quarterback Ryan Nassib of Syracuse was selected by the Giants during this pick. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

The fourth through seventh rounds of the NFL Draft gets underway Saturday, April 27, 2013 at Radio City Music Hall in New York. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)

FILE -In this Nov. 13, 2012, file photo, Syracuse quarterback Ryan Nassib (12) runs for a gain against Cincinnati defensive back Camerron Cheatham (21) during the second quarter of an NCAA college football game at Nippert Stadium in Cincinnati. Nassib was drafted by the New York Giants in the fourth round of the NFL Draft on Saturday, April 27, 2013.(AP Photo/David Kohl, File)

(AP) ? This was one rush quarterbacks embraced.

Starting with Matt Barkley, the fourth round of the NFL draft was the landing spot for quarterbacks who carried hopes of going much higher. Philadelphia traded up with Jacksonville to get the Southern California QB with the opening pick Saturday.

"I try not to get stressed about things I can't control," Barkley said when asked about his drop in the draft from likely first-rounder in 2012 to No. 98 overall. "I'm just glad I know where my home is and I can't wait to hit the playbook."

Yes, it was three rounds later than Barkley hoped for. Same thing for Ryan Nassib of Syracuse, Landry Jones of Oklahoma and Tyler Wilson of Arkansas, the other quarterbacks chosen in Round 4.

"We're going to take the best value on the board," coach Chip Kelly said, adding the Eagles rated Barkley in the top 50. "There's a prime example. The best value on the board by far was Matt. He's an extremely mature young man, intelligent, articulate. He has that 'it' factor."

Perhaps. But he seemed to have a lot more of it last year, but Barkley opted to return to school. He and the Trojans slumped, Barkley injured his shoulder, and his stock plummeted.

He will join quarterbacks Michael Vick and Nick Foles in Philadelphia.

The New York Giants, hardly in need of a quarterback with Eli Manning in his prime, still dealt with Arizona to move up for Nassib.

Nassib, from the Philadelphia suburbs, took a call from Giants coach Tom Coughlin, but wasn't sure what Coughlin told him.

"To be honest with you, I blacked out. I didn't get everything," Nassib said. "What I did get from him was that first off I had to cut my ties with the Philadelphia Eagles and switch, which won't be a problem."

Oakland, which acquired Matt Flynn from Seattle in the offseason to be its starter, followed two picks later at No. 112 overall with Wilson. Three spots after that, Pittsburgh grabbed Jones, probably hoping to groom him behind Ben Roethlisberger.

"I just think it was time to start grooming a new player, freshen up the room if you will," quarterbacks coach Randy Fichtner said.

"I get to learn from one of the best quarterbacks to play the game," Jones added.

Before Saturday's surge, quarterbacks were rare ? only one was chosen in each of the first three rounds: Florida State's EJ Manuel by Buffalo in the first round; West Virginia's Geno Smith by the Jets in the second; and North Carolina State's Mike Glennon by Tampa Bay in the third.

In all, 11 QBs were selected, the same number as last year. But four went in the first round in 2012.

A former quarterback, Denard Robinson of Michigan, is headed to Jacksonville, which had one of the league's worst offenses the last two years. Robinson will be switched to running back or receiver by the Jaguars; he set the NCAA record for career yards rushing (4,495) by a quarterback.

"A lot of people have put me at different positions," he said. "Now it's time to go to work."

South Carolina running back Marcus Lattimore, who would have been a high pick if healthy but is coming off a second severe knee injury, went to the 49ers 131st overall. San Francisco can afford to "redshirt" Lattimore because it has a strong stable of runners, including Frank Gore, Kendall Hunter and LaMichael James.

"We really haven't even talked about that, so I don't have any clue," Lattimore said about possibly sitting out 2013 to heal completely. "My main goal right now is to go in there and work hard, go in there and learn the offense, and if I'm ready to play, I'm going to play, and if I'm not, I'm not."

Lattimore, who dislocated his left knee and tore three ligaments last season, said he spoke with Gore during his rehab.

"And now I'm with the 49ers, and it's just a great, great situation for me," Lattimore said.

Special teamers finally got the call when three kickers went in the fifth round: punters Jeff Locke of UCLA to Minnesota and Sam Martin of Appalachian State to Seattle, and placekicker Caleb Sturgis of Florida to Miami.

National champion Alabama, which had four players chosen previously ? three in the first round ? had five more go on the final day: linebacker Nico Johnson to Kansas City with the pick after Barkley was taken; guard Barrett Jones, who can play all offensive line positions, to the Rams; DTs Jesse Williams to Seattle and Quinton Dial to San Francisco; and tight end Michael Williams.

Mr. Irrelevant, the 254th and final pick, was tight end Justice Cunningham of South Carolina by Indianapolis.

___

AP Pro Football Writer Rob Maaddi and Sports Writers Tom Canavan, Will Graves and Mark Long contributed to this story.

___

Online: http://pro32.ap.org and http://twitter.com/AP_NFL

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-04-27-FBN-NFL-Draft/id-9ab8c99cc6b64262a4f3b77f468982fe

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Monday, 22 April 2013

American Greetings Taylor Swift Greeting Card Mobile App and ...

This post has not been monetarily compensated. I received a prize pack. Please note that any personal opinions reflected in this post are my own and have not been influenced by the sponsor in any way.

Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift is so popular right now. I?ve learned that Taylor Swift has teamed up with American Greetings to help consumers send a little love and celebrate life?s amazing moments, by launching the American Greetings Taylor Swift Greeting Card Mobile App and Sweepstakes!

The (free) Taylor Swift Greeting Card Mobile App by American Greetings allows you to send lovely custom greeting card anytime, anywhere, for anyone! These digital greeting cards are for sharing a little happiness with all the awesome people in your life?on their birthday, a holiday, or any day you?re feeling especially grateful and want to let them know. Find the perfect card, add a message, a favorite photo or even sign it on you touch screen and then send from a mobile phone or tablet to a recipient via text message, email, Facebook and Twitter.

I?ve never seen Taylor Swift in concert, but a teenage girl that I love has, and she told me it was amazing. I can only imagine how thrilled she would be to see Taylor live in concert, in Nashville, with three of her friends and family. Well, American Greetings can make exactly that happen for one lucky winner of the sweepstakes.

They?ll be sending one Grand Prize winner to Nashville to see the final stop on the Taylor Swift The RED Tour on September 21, 2013. The prize will include airplane + hotel + concert tickets + spending money. Entrants will have opportunities to win lots of other fun prizes, too, like Taylor t-shirts, Taylor bracelets, Taylor notebooks, Taylor posters. There will be 13 great Taylor Swift prize packages for each of the 13 weeks of the sweepstakes.

So if you?re waiting for the perfect time to enter the sweepstakes how about right now? And again tomorrow, and again on the day after that?! You can enter once every single day of the sweepstakes now through June 11. Check out the official rules for all the info, and good luck!!

Taylor Swift Prize Pack

WIN IT!

One (1) winner will receive a Taylor Swift prize pack of their own, which will include a Taylor Swift-branded T-Shirt, Branded guitar pick pack and Taylor Swift IPhone case (4s).

HOW TO ENTER. (MANDATORY)

To enter please leave a comment telling me what your favorite Taylor Swift song is.

BONUS ENTRIES ? LOTS OF THEM!

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THE SMALL PRINT.

The winner will be selected using the ?And the winner is? plugin. US addresses only please, no PO Boxes. This contest will end on Sunday 04/28/13 at 11:59 pm est. If you?ve entered any of my giveaways before then you know that only comments containing all of the requested information will be eligible for entry. Good luck to everyone!

Source: http://www.valmg.com/index.php/2013/american-greetings-taylor-swift-greeting-card-mobile-app-and-sweepstakes-with-giveaway/

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Sunday, 21 April 2013

They sing and they dance (oh way oh) (Unqualified Offerings)

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Police: Man hijacks Texas bus, later kills himself

AUSTIN, Texas (AP) ? Police say a gunman hijacked a city bus in Austin and led officers on a 30-mile chase before pulling over and killing himself.

Austin police Lt. James Nisula tells Associated Press Radio the man boarded the bus Saturday and ordered the bus driver to get off.

The Austin American-Statesman reports he also forced two passengers to leave the vehicle before getting behind the steering wheel and driving away.

Police spotted the bus and pursued it. They tried several times to get the driver to pull over, but he refused.

Nisula says officers put down road spikes and deflated the bus tires. He says the man eventually pulled into an auto parts store parking lot, where he fatally shot himself.

Police didn't immediately release the man's name.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/police-man-hijacks-texas-bus-later-kills-himself-034431281.html

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Pa. nurse says there was 'no justification' for killing 29 patients

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) ? At his sentencing hearings in 2006, serial killer nurse Charles Cullen did not explain why he killed at least 29 hospital and nursing home patients in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

He had told investigators they were mercy killings. But a prosecutor said Cullen was driven by a compulsion to kill and was no "angel of death."

In an interview to be broadcast Sunday on CBS' "60 Minutes," Cullen at first says he thought he was helping people by ending their suffering. Many of the victims of his lethal drug overdoses were old or gravely ill.

But Cullen tells a different story when reminded some victims were not close to death. He says there was "no justification" and "I felt overwhelmed at the time."

Cullen is serving multiple life terms in New Jersey.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nurse-backs-off-mercy-claim-29-nj-pa-153353471.html

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Saturday, 20 April 2013

Dell shares at two month low after Blackstone pulls out

NEW YORK/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Shares in Dell Inc dived to a 2-month low on Friday after Blackstone Group LP withdrew from a three-way battle to buy out the company, citing a crumbling personal computer market that has reduced financial forecasts at the world's No. 3 PC maker.

Its withdrawal eases the way for founder Michael Dell and Silver Lake to go ahead with a $24.4 billion deal to take the company private for $13.65 a share, in what would be the largest private equity-led buyout since the 2008 financial crisis.

Dell's stock fell 4 percent to close at $13.40, below that original offer price and the lowest level since February 6.

On Friday, Dell said its special committee, set up to review competing offers, was continuing discussions with both its billionaire founder and the other bidder, activist investor Carl Icahn, and still saw a deal closing by the fiscal second quarter.

The bid by Silver Lake and Michael Dell, however, has aroused the ire of major investors, including top independent shareholder Southeastern Asset Management, who complain that the offer undervalues the company.

Blackstone initially offered $14.25 a share. Icahn, who has taken a significant stake in the company, remains in the running and has proposed $15 per share for 58 percent of Dell.

It is unclear how Southeastern would respond. The fund management firm declined to comment.

Icahn, who is known for aggressively pushing for changes at companies he invests in, did not respond to requests for comment. But the Wall Street Journal cited a source "familiar with his thinking" as saying the billionaire investor will wait to see how shareholders vote on Michael Dell's bid.

If they reject his offer, Icahn would consider launching a hostile bid, the Journal cited the unidentified source as saying.

"I don't feel comfortable one bit that shareholders are getting a fair price," Don Yacktman, president of Austin, Texas-based Yacktman Asset Management, told Reuters on Friday.

Yacktman, whose firm owned 14.91 million shares of Dell, or a slightly less than 1 percent stake in the company as of December 31, said that while he is disappointed that Blackstone pulled out of the bidding, he is hopeful that Icahn's presence in the process will result in a better deal for shareholders.

"I would obviously like to see more players, but Dell still has to deal with Carl Icahn and Icahn can be a tough guy to deal with."

A PRIVATE DELL

Blackstone's abrupt withdrawal a mere month after launching its bid is the latest twist in an increasingly complicated tussle over Dell, which began with a February announcement of Michael Dell's proposal to take his company private.

The self-made billionaire wants to take the company he founded in 1984 in a college dorm-room off public markets, hoping to transform it into a provider of enterprise computing services away from investor scrutiny. But shareholders complain such a deal deprives them of a chance to share in the future benefits of a successful overhaul.

"By being private, Dell can make many more strategic decisions, particularly around pricing to grow and upsell into its customer base," Um wrote on Friday.

"Being private also takes the customer discussion away from the operations of the company ... and will allow the company to focus on its products and solutions."

Some analysts have wondered whether Dell, which in the past decade has steadily ceded ground to its rivals in the global market, is as attractive a buyout target as a three-way battle would suggest.

Personal computer sales plunged 14 percent in the first three months of the year, the biggest decline on record, as tablets continued to gain in popularity and buyers appeared to be avoiding Microsoft Corp's new Windows 8 system, according to leading technology tracking firm IDC.

Dell was hailed as a model of production innovation as recently as the early 2000s, pioneering online ordering of custom-configured PCs and working closely with Asian component suppliers and manufacturers to assure rock-bottom costs.

As of 2013's first quarter, its share of the global PC market had slipped to 11.8 percent, behind Hewlett Packard Co and China's Lenovo Group Ltd.

(Reporting by Nadia Damouni, Greg Roumeliotis, Jessica Toonkel and Soyoung Kim, and Edwin Chan. Editing by Andre Grenon and Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/dell-shares-two-month-low-blackstone-pulls-175403901--sector.html

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Intense, specialized training in young athletes linked to serious overuse injuries

Apr. 19, 2013 ? ?Young athletes who specialize in one sport and train intensively have a significantly higher risk of stress fractures and other severe overuse injuries, even when compared with other injured athletes, according to the largest clinical study of its kind.

For example, young athletes who spent more hours per week than their age playing one sport ? such as a 12-year-old who plays tennis 13 or more hours a week ? were 70 percent more likely to experience serious overuse injuries than other injuries.

Loyola University Medical Center sports medicine physician Dr. Neeru Jayanthi presented findings during an oral podium research session April 19 at the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) meeting in San Diego. The study is titled ?Risks of Specialized Training and Growth in Young Athletes: A Prospective Clinical Cohort Study.?

"We should be cautious about intense specialization in one sport before and during adolescence,? Jayanthi said. ?Among the recommendations we can make, based on our findings, is that young athletes should not spend more hours per week in organized sports than their ages.?

Between 2010 and 20103, Jayanthi and colleagues at Loyola and Lurie Children?s Hospital of Chicago enrolled 1,206 athletes ages 8 to 18 between who had come in for sports physicals or treatment for injuries. Researchers are following each athlete for up to three years.

There were 859 total injuries, including 564 overuse injuries, in cases in which the clinical diagnosis was recorded. The overuse injuries included 139 serious injuries such as stress fractures in the back or limbs, elbow ligament injuries and osteochondral injuries (injuries to cartilage and underlying bone). Such serious injuries can force young athletes to the sidelines for one to six months or longer.

The study confirmed preliminary findings, reported earlier, that specializing in a single sport increases the risk of overall injury, even when controlling for an athlete?s age and hours per week of sports activity.

Among the study?s other findings:

? Young athletes were more likely to be injured if they spent more than twice as much time playing organized sports as they spent in unorganized free play -- for example, playing 11 hours of organized soccer each week, and only 5 hours of free play such as pick-up games.

? Athletes who suffered serious injuries spent an average of 21 hours per week in total physical activity (organized sports, gym and unorganized free play), including 13 hours in organized sports. By comparison, athletes who were not injured, participated in less activity ? 17.6 hours per week in total physical activity, including only 9.4 hours in organized sports.

? Injured athletes scored 3.3 on researchers? six-point sports-specialization scale. Uninjured athletes scored 2.7 on the specialization scale. (On the sports specialization scale, an athlete is given one point for each of the following: Trains more than 75 percent of the time in one sport; trains to improve skill or misses time with friends; has quit other sports to focus on one sport; considers one sport more important than other sports; regularly travels out of state; trains more than eight months a year or competes more than six months per year.

Jayanthi offers the following tips to reduce the risk of injuries in young adults:

? Do not spend more hours per week than your age playing sports. (Younger children are developmentally immature and may be less able to tolerate physical stress.)

? Do not spend more than twice as much time playing organized sports as you spend in gym and unorganized play.

? Do not specialize in one sport before late adolescence.

? Do not play sports competitively year round. Take a break from competition for one-to-three months each year (not necessarily consecutively).

? Take at least one day off per week from training in sports.

Jayanthi and colleagues at Loyola and Lurie Children?s Hospital are planning a follow-up study to determine whether counseling recommendations on proper sports training can reduce the risk of overuse injuries in young athletes. The study is called TRACK ? Training, Risk Assessment and Counseling in Kids.

?We will be testing our hypothesis that many of these serious injuries are potentially preventable,? Jayanthi said.

The current study was funded by two research grants from the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine. Jayanthi is a member of an AMSSM committee that is writing guidelines on preventing and treating overuse injuries in young athletes.

Jayanthi is Medical Director of Primary Care Sports Medicine at Loyola. He is an associate professor in the Departments of Family Medicine and Orthopaedic Surgery & Rehabilitation at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine.

Co-authors of the study Lara Dugas, PhD, of Loyola?s Department of Public Health Sciences and Cynthia LaBella, MD, and Brittany Patrick of Lurie Children?s hospital. Loyola medical students and research assistants who assisted in the study are Dan Fisher, Courtney Pinkham, Erin Feller and Peter Linn.

The study was originally supported by Stritch School of Medicine's Student Training in Approaches to Research (STAR) program.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/ymU5JZksrZM/130419132508.htm

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Friday, 19 April 2013

Gene data show China bird flu mutated "under the radar"

LONDON | Fri Apr 19, 2013 11:19am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - The new strain of bird flu that has killed 17 people in China has been circulating widely "under the radar" and has acquired significant genetic diversity that makes it more of a threat, scientists said on Friday.

Dutch and Chinese researchers who analyzed genetic data from seven samples of the new H7N9 strain say it has already acquired similar levels of genetic diversity as much larger outbreaks of other H7 strains of flu seen previously in birds.

"The diversity we see in these first few samples from China is as great as the diversity we have seen with a large outbreak in the Netherlands several years ago and one in Italy," said Marion Koopmans, head of virology at the Dutch National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, who worked on the study as part of a nine-member team.

"This means it (the H7N9 strain in China) has been spreading quite a bit and it's important to understand where exactly that is going on."

Its genetic diversity shows the virus has an ability to mutate repeatedly and is likely to continue doing so, raising the risk that it may become transmissible among humans.

Koopmans, whose research was published in the online journal Eurosurveillance, said the circulation would probably have taken place in either birds or mammals, but said exactly which animals were involved was not yet clear.

"Simply the fact that this virus is spreading under the radar - because that is what this data confirms - is of concern," she told Reuters in a telephone interview.

The H7N9 virus is so far known to have infected 87 people in China, killing 17 of them. Health officials raised further questions on Friday about the source of the new strain after data indicated that more than half of patients had had no contact with poultry.

MUTATIONS

A scientific study published last week showed the H7N9 strain was a so-called "triple reassortant" virus with a mixture of genes from three other flu strains found in birds in Asia. One of those three strains is thought to have come from a brambling, a type of small wild bird.

For their study, Koopmans and her team compared some data from the first two weeks of the China H7N9 outbreak with data from a large H7N7 flu outbreak in birds and people the Netherlands in 2003 and an H7N1 epidemic in birds in Italy in 1999 and 2000.

The Dutch outbreak resulted in infection of poultry on 255 farms and led to the culling of about 30 million chickens. Some 89 people were also diagnosed as having the H7N7 virus and one person, a vet, died as a result of the infection.

The comparison suggested that "widespread circulation (of the H7N9 strain in China) must have occurred, resulting in major genetic diversification", the researchers wrote in their study.

They added: "Such diversification is of concern, given that several markers associated with increased risk for public health are already present."

Flu experts in China and at the World Health Organization say there is no evidence so far that H7N9 is passing easily between people.

But scientists who analyzed the genetic sequence data from three early samples from China say the virus has already acquired some mutations that might make it more likely to be able to do so in the future, raising the risk of a human pandemic.

"Although human infections with H7 influenza viruses have occurred repeatedly over the last decades without evidence of sustained human-to-human transmission, the absence of sustained human-to-human transmission of H7N9 viruses does not come with any guarantee," Koopmans' team wrote in their study.

(Editing by Ben Hirschler and Alison Williams)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/tNqSsnNLmbI/story01.htm

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Scientists throw new light on DNA copying process

Apr. 18, 2013 ? Research led by a scientist at the University of York has thrown new light on the way breakdowns in the DNA copying process inside cells can contribute to cancer and other diseases.

Peter McGlynn, an Anniversary Professor in the University's Department of Biology, led a team of researchers who have discovered that the protein machines that copy DNA in a model organism pause frequently during this copying process, creating the potential for dangerous mutations to develop.

The research, which is published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), involved scientists at the School of Medical Sciences at the University of Aberdeen, where Professor McGlynn worked previously, the Centre for Genetics and Genomics at the Queen's Medical Centre, University of Nottingham and the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York.

The project focused on a bacterium called Escherichia coli which is a powerful model for studying the DNA copying process, the study of which has revealed many aspects of DNA metabolism in more complex organisms such as humans.

Professor McGlynn, who was one of 16 Chairs established at York to mark the University's 50th Anniversary, says: "Our work demonstrates that when organisms try to copy their genetic material, the copying machines stall very frequently which is the first step in formation of mutations that, in man, can cause cancers and genetic disease.

"We have analysed what causes most of these breakdowns and how, under normal circumstances, cells repair these broken copying machines. Just as importantly, our work reveals that efficient repair of these breakdowns is very important to avoid corruption of the genetic code."

The research was funded by the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC).

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of York.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. M. K. Gupta, C. P. Guy, J. T. P. Yeeles, J. Atkinson, H. Bell, R. G. Lloyd, K. J. Marians, P. McGlynn. Protein-DNA complexes are the primary sources of replication fork pausing in Escherichia coli. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1303890110

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.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/health_medicine/genes/~3/6IksOA94YKw/130418104334.htm

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Thursday, 18 April 2013

Sky Go updated to add support for more current devices

Android Central

Sony Xperia Z, HTC One, Motorola RAZR HD and Samsung Galaxy S4 owners will all be able to make use of the service now

Sky Go, the app that allows Sky TV customers to stream live TV To their Android devices has been updated to support some of the latest devices on the market. The story of Sky Go is a somewhat troublesome one, with lack of support for devices and platform versions dogging it since launch. Thankfully the folks at Sky seem to be getting it together more so these days, and today's update adds support for the Motorola RAZR HD, Sony Xperia Z, the HTC One and the Samsung Galaxy S4 when it hits on April 26. 

Sky Go is a service much loved by many of its customers, and there can't  be many better smartphones to stream TV on than this latest crop of HD devices. The update also promises some bug fixes and better stability, and you can grab yourselves a copy at the Play Store link above. 

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/S4zE6eKcoAE/story01.htm

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Why Would Anyone Buy a Bow Tie-Shaped Beer Can That Actually Gives You Less Beer?

When Budweiser changed its iconic all American beer can to accentuate the bow tie logo of the so called King of Beers, I was not happy. Even though I don't really care what the outside of the beer can looks like as long as my words start slurring. Even though I don't drink Budweiser. It was a telegraphed move by an old company trying to fake cool. Whatever. I'm over it now. But now Budweiser is introducing a bow tie-shaped can to match their bow tie logo. It kind of looks like the dented cans you see littered around a frat house. It kind of looks like the redesigned Xbox. It's a beer can without the beer belly. Which makes sense because it also has less beer. More »
    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/KVhJvnG_MOw/why-would-anyone-buy-a-bow-tie+shaped-beer-can-that-actually-gives-you-less-beer

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Brain training games don't actually make you smarter.

Wow...after having done several posts uncritically passing on studies by Jaeggi and others claiming that games to improve working memory, such as the n-Back game, increase cognitive skills in other areas, a number of studies have failed to replicate these phenomena. Gareth Cook has done an interesting article on this in The New Yorker, suggesting that claims made by commercial software sites like Cogmen, Lumosity, and CogniFit are bogus.

Over the last year, however, the idea that working-memory training has broad benefits has crumbled. One group of psychologists, lead by a team at Georgia Tech, set out to replicate the Jaeggi findings, but with more careful controls and seventeen different cognitive-skills tests. Their subjects showed no evidence whatsoever for improvement in intelligence. They also identified a pattern of methodological problems with experiments showing positive results, like poor controls and a reliance on a single measure of cognitive improvement. This failed replication was recently published in one of psychology?s top journals, and another, by a group at Case Western Reserve University, has been published since.
The recent meta-analysis, led by Monica Melby-Lerv?g, of the University of Oslo, and also published in a top journal, is even more damning. Some studies are more convincing than others, because they include more subjects and show a larger effect. Melby-Lerv?g?s paper laboriously accounts for this, incorporating what Jaeggi, Klingberg, and everyone else had reported. The meta-analysis found that the training isn?t doing anyone much good. If anything, the scientific literature tends to overstate effects, because teams that find nothing tend not to publish their papers. (This is known as the ?filedrawer? effect.) A null result from meta-analysis, published in a top journal, sends a shudder through the spine of all but the truest of believers. In the meantime, a separate paper by some of the Georgia Tech scientists looked specifically at Cogmed?s training, which has been subjected to more scientific scrutiny than any other program. ?The claims made by Cogmed,? they wrote, ?are largely unsubstantiated.?

Source: http://mindblog.dericbownds.net/2013/04/brain-training-games-dont-actually-make.html

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Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Picture this: A dramatic drop in wrong patient errors

Apr. 15, 2013 ? Adding a photo of a face to x-ray images can reduce "wrong-patient" errors five-fold, a new study finds.

"X-rays can look alike, and if one patient's images are confused with another before the radiologist sees them, it can be difficult for the radiologist to determine there is a mismatch," said Dr. Srini Tridandapani, of Emory University and an author of the study.

As part of the study, ten radiologists interpreted 20 pairs of radiographic images with and without photographs. Two to four mismatched pairs were included in each set of 20 pairs of images. When photographs were added, radiologists correctly identified the mismatch 64% of the time. The error detection rate was about 13% when photographs were not included, said Dr. Tridandapani.

The radiologists in the study did not know they could use the photographs as a means to identify mismatched x-ray images, and some said they purposely ignored the photographs because they thought the study was designed to determine if a photograph would distract them. "We did a second study of five radiologists, and we told them to use the photographs. The error detection rate went up to 94% in the second study," said Dr. Tridandapani.

Surprisingly, the interpretation time went down in the first study when the photographs were added to the images, said Dr. Tridandapani. "We're not sure why this happened, but it could be because the photograph provided clinical clues that assisted the radiologist in making the diagnosis," he said.

"I estimate that about 1 out of 10,000 examinations have wrong-patient errors," Dr. Tridandapani said. "It occurred to me that we should be adding a photograph to every medical imaging study as a means to correct this problem after I received a phone call, and a picture of the caller appeared on my phone. The picture immediately identified for me who the caller was," he said.

The study required additional personnel to take the pictures of the patients immediately after the patients' x-ray examination. However, Dr. Tridandapani and his colleagues have developed a prototype system where the camera can be attached to a portable x-ray machine; the picture is taken without additional personnel.

The study, jointly conducted at Emory University and Georgia Institute of Technology, will be presented at the ARRS annual meeting on April 15 in Washington, DC.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by American Roentgen Ray Society, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


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.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/X5AWwqBR5j0/130415100848.htm

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CyanogenMod 10.1 nightlies reach Xperia Z and ZL, other recent Sony models

CyanogenMod 101 nighlies reach Xperia Z and ZL, other recent Sony models

Sony has been friendlier than many of its mobile rivals toward outside code, backing AOSP efforts even when it has had to shoulder most of the responsibilities. It's only fitting, then, that five of its more recent smartphones just received their first nightly CyanogenMod 10.1 builds, all in one fell swoop. Support for the Xperia Z and ZL is no doubt the highlight, although experimenters who stand just short of the cutting edge can get CyanogenMod releases for the Xperia T, TX and V. As always, nightlies of custom OS code redefine risky -- but those who can't wait for Sony to push a safe Android 4.2 release can now do more than just twiddle their thumbs.

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Comments

Via: Phone Arena

Source: CyanogenMod (Xperia Z), (ZL), (T)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/04/16/cyanogenmod-10-1-nightlies-reach-sony-xperia-z-and-zl/

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Monday, 15 April 2013

NEC MultiSync EA244WMi


The NEC MultiSync family of business monitors has a new addition, and it's a winner. The NEC MultiSync EA244WMi uses a 24-inch IPS panel to deliver robust colors, accurate grayscale reproduction, and wide off-angle viewing. Moreover, it is offers virtually every video input you'll ever need, has a four-port USB hub, and is equipped with a highly adjustable ergonomic stand. It'll save you money on your utility bill, too. My gripes are minor; the USB ports are 2.0 instead of the speedier 3.0, and you have to use your graphics card control panel to rotate the image when pivoting the panel. Nevertheless, the EA244WMI is an outstanding business monitor and snags our Editors' Choice for mid-sized business monitors.

Design and Features
With its matte-black cabinet and thin (0.5-inch) bezels, the EA244WMi looks like a typical business display. It uses a 24-inch IPS (In Plane Switching) panel with a 1,920-by-1,200 resolution and a 16:10 aspect ratio, which is a departure from the ubiquitous 1,920-by-1,080 panels dominating the display market. The cabinet is 2.6-inch thick and weighs 10.6 pounds. It sits atop a sturdy stand comprised of a telescoping arm that gives you five inches of height adjustability and a hinge assembly that has tilt and pivot functionality. The round base contains a Lazy Susan mechanism that allows swivel adjustments. The only thing the EA244WMi doesn't do is re-orient the picture when you pivot the panel. For that you'll have to upgrade to one of the more expensive MultiSync PA models, such as the NEC MultiSync PA301W. Or, you can save all that money and use your graphics card's control panel to switch between portrait and landscape modes.

Positioned along the left side of the lower bezel are an ambient light sensor and a human sensor. With ambient sensing enabled the monitor will automatically adjust the brightness level according to the current lighting environment. The human sensor detects movement; after a predetermined period time the monitor will enter one of two power saving modes if there is no movement.

To the right of the sensors are five touch sensitive buttons (on/off, input, menu, left and right navigation arrows) and just above them on the right side bezel are three more navigation buttons (up and down arrows, ECO mode). Each button uses an on-screen label to describe what it does, making menu navigation a breeze.

There's no shortage of ports on the EA244WMi. The rear of the cabinet is home to DisplayPort, HDMI, DVI, and VGA video inputs as well as a pair of up-firing speakers. It also holds an upstream USB port and two downstream USB ports. Two additional USB ports are mounted on the left side of the display for easy access. While it's nice to have a four port USB hub, it would be even nicer if it supported USB 3.0 instead of the slower USB 2.0 standard. Lastly, there are two Control Sync ports (in/out) and an audio input. Control Sync lets you copy settings from one monitor (the master) and send them to up to five sub monitors that are connected via a special cable.

Picture settings include brightness, contrast, black level, and six picture presets (standard, text, movie, gaming, photo, dynamic). You can enable one of three ECO modes (off, 1, 2) and set the Auto Brightness feature to dynamically change brightness levels depending on ambient light, the amount of white content, or both. Here you can also determine thresholds for the Human Sensor feature, such as how long before the monitor reacts and what power saving mode it will enter if no motion is detected. There's also a Data Copy option that works with the Control Sync feature.

The EA244WMi comes with a three-year parts, labor, and backlighting warranty. Inside the box are USB, DVI, audio, and VGA cables. You also get a Control Sync cable and a Setup manual. DisplayPort and HDMI cables are not included.

Performance
The EA244WMi is a stellar performer. It nailed the DisplayMate 64-Step Grayscale test, displaying all shades of gray. Granted, it doesn't provide the same level of accuracy that you get from high-end IPS panels like the one used on its bigger (and pricier) sibling, the PA301W, but it's quite good for a mid-range monitor. Colors were well saturated and rich, and skin tones looked natural with no obvious tinting issues.

Off angle viewing was typical for an IPS panel; colors remained true from the side, top, and bottom and the picture remained bright regardless of the viewing angle. Additionally, small text from the Scaled Fonts test was crisp and easy to read.

This 24-inch monitor is a power miser. It used 26-watts of power in standard ECO mode compared to the EA232WMi, which used 34 watts. Switching over to ECO 1 (Energy Star) lowered usage to 19 watts, while ECO mode 2 (40% power savings) yielded 13-watts. By way of comparison, the EA232WMI used 28-watts (mode 1) and 18-watts (mode 2). The EA244WMi's excellent power saving features and low power usage earn it our GreenTech stamp of approval.

The NEC MultiSync EA244WMi is a stellar performing monitor that's jam-packed with business-centric features, including a flexible stand, a USB hub, and a variety of video inputs. In addition to its stellar performance, IT personnel will appreciate the Control Sync feature, and eco-friendly business owners will love its energy efficiency and power saving options. I'd prefer USB 3.0 connectivity and an auto-rotate feature, but neither gripe prevents the EA244WMI from earning our Editors' Choice for mid-sized business monitors.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/5horNxR9UEc/0,2817,2417716,00.asp

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Sunday, 14 April 2013

Better batteries from waste sulfur

Apr. 14, 2013 ? A new chemical process can transform waste sulfur into a lightweight plastic that may improve batteries for electric cars, reports a University of Arizona-led team. The new plastic has other potential uses, including optical uses.

The team has successfully used the new plastic to make lithium-sulfur batteries.

"We've developed a new, simple and useful chemical process to convert sulfur into a useful plastic," lead researcher Jeffrey Pyun said.

Next-generation lithium-sulfur, or Li-S, batteries will be better for electric and hybrid cars and for military uses because they are more efficient, lighter and cheaper than those currently used, said Pyun, a UA associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry.

The new plastic has great promise as something that can be produced easily and inexpensively on an industrial scale, he said.

The team's discovery could provide a new use for the sulfur left over when oil and natural gas are refined into cleaner-burning fuels.

Although there are some industrial uses for sulfur, the amount generated from refining fossil fuels far outstrips the current need for the element. Some oil refineries, such as those in Ft. McMurray in Alberta, are accumulating yellow mountains of waste sulfur.

"There's so much of it we don't know what to do with it," said Pyun. He calls the left-over sulfur "the garbage of transportation."

About one-half pound of sulfur is left over for every 19 gallons of gasoline produced from fossil fuels, calculated co-author Jared Griebel, a UA chemistry and biochemistry doctoral candidate.

The researchers have filed an international patent for their new chemical process and for the new polymeric electrode materials for Li-S batteries.

The international team's research article, "The Use of Elemental Sulfur as an Alternative Feedstock for Polymeric Materials," is scheduled for online publication in Nature Chemistry April 14.

Pyun and Griebel's co-authors are Woo Jin Chung, Adam G. Simmonds, Hyun Jun Ji, Philip T. Dirlam, Richard S. Glass and ?rp?d Somogyi of the UA; Eui Tae Kim, Hyunsik Yoon, Jungjin Park, Yung-Eun Sung, and Kookheon Char of Seoul National University in Korea; Jeong Jae Wie, Ngoc A. Nguyen, Brett W. Guralnick and Michael E. Mackay of the University of Delaware in Newark; and Patrick Theato of the University of Hamburg in Germany.

Pyun wanted to apply his expertise as a chemist to energy-related research. He knew about the world's glut of elemental sulfur at fossil fuel refineries -- so he focused on how chemistry could use the cheap sulfur to satisfy the need for good Li-S batteries.

He and his colleagues tried something new: transforming liquid sulfur into a useful plastic that eventually could be produced easily on an industrial scale.

Sulfur poses technical challenges. It doesn't easily form the stable long chains of molecules, known as polymers, needed make a moldable plastic, and most materials don't dissolve in sulfur.

Pyun and his colleagues identified the chemicals most likely to polymerize sulfur and girded themselves for the long process of testing those chemicals one by one by one. More than 20 chemicals were on the list.

They got lucky.

"The first one worked -- and nothing else thereafter," Pyun said.

Even though the first experiment worked, the scientists needed to try the other chemicals on their list to see if others worked better and to understand more about working with liquid sulfur.

They've dubbed their process "inverse vulcanization" because it requires mostly sulfur with a small amount of an additive. Vulcanization is the chemical process that makes rubber more durable by adding a small amount of sulfur to rubber.

The new plastic performs better in batteries than elemental sulfur, Pyun said, because batteries with cathodes made of elemental sulfur can be used and recharged only a limited number of times before they fail.

The new plastic has electrochemical properties superior to those of the elemental sulfur now used in Li-S batteries, the researchers report. The team's batteries exhibited high specific capacity (823 mAh/g at 100 cycles) and enhanced capacity retention.

Several companies have expressed interest in the new plastic and the new battery, Pyun said.

The team's next step is comparing properties of the new plastic to existing plastics and exploring other practical applications such as photonics for the new plastic.

The National Research Foundation of Korea, the Korean Ministry of Education, Science and Technology, the American Chemical Society and the University of Arizona funded the research.

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The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of Arizona, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Woo Jin Chung, Jared J. Griebel, Eui Tae Kim, Hyunsik Yoon, Adam G. Simmonds, Hyun Jun Ji, Philip T. Dirlam, Richard S. Glass, Jeong Jae Wie, Ngoc A. Nguyen, Brett W. Guralnick, Jungjin Park, ?rp?d Somogyi, Patrick Theato, Michael E. Mackay, Yung-Eun Sung, Kookheon Char, Jeffrey Pyun. The use of elemental sulfur as an alternative feedstock for polymeric materials. Nature Chemistry, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/nchem.1624

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

Disclaimer: Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/matter_energy/electricity/~3/IpDV9WUxuiY/130414193441.htm

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