Archive for September, 2009

Sunday, September 27th, 2009

Do you know about on how the Moon influences on you? So, according to livescience.com a host of studies over the years have aimed at teasing out any statistical connection between the moon – particularly the full moon – and human biology or behavior. The majority of sound studies find no connection, while some have proved inconclusive, and many that purported to reveal connections turned out to involve flawed methods or have never been reproduced.

No wonder that the moon holds a mystical place in the history of human culture, then there is many myths – from werewolves to induced lunacy to epileptic seizures – have built up regarding its supposed effects on us. Often one can hear – “It must be a full moon,” the phrase, which means a lot of crazy things happen and as researchers said to be muttered commonly by late-night cops, psychiatry staff and emergency room personnel.

In fact a host of studies over the years have aimed at teasing out any statistical connection between the moon – particularly the full moon – and human biology or behavior. The majority of sound studies find no connection, while some have proved inconclusive, and many that purported to reveal connections turned out to involve flawed methods or have never been reproduced. Reliable studies comparing the lunar phases to births, heart attacks, deaths, suicides, violence, psychiatric hospital admissions and epileptic seizures, among other things, have over and over again found little or no connection.

One possible indirect link: Before modern lighting, the light of a full moon have kept people up at night, leading to sleep deprivation that could have caused other psychological issues, according to one hypothesis that awaits data support.

Below, I’ll review several studies – the good, the bad and the in between – but first some basic physics:

The moon, tides and you

The human body is about 75 percent water, and so people often ask whether tides are at work inside us.

The moon and the sun combine to create tides in Earth’s oceans (in fact the gravitational effect is so strong that our planet’s crust is stretched daily by these same tidal effects).

But tides are large-scale events. They occur because of the difference in gravitational effect on one side of an object (like Earth) compared to the other. Here’s how they work (full explanation of tides):

The ocean on the side of Earth facing the moon gets pulled toward the moon more than does the center of the planet. This creates a high tide. On the other side of the Earth, another high tide occurs, because the center of Earth is being pulled toward the moon more than is the ocean on the far side. The result essentially pulls the planet away from the ocean (a negative force that effectively lifts the ocean away from the planet).

However, there’s no measurable difference in the moon’s gravitational effect to one side of your body vs. the other. Even in a large lake, tides are extremely minor. On the Great Lakes, for example, tides never exceed 2 inches, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which adds, “These minor variations are masked by the greater fluctuations in lake levels produced by wind and barometric pressure changes. Consequently, the Great Lakes are considered to be essentially non-tidal.”

That’s not to say tides don’t exist at smaller scales.

The effect of gravity diminishes with distance, but never goes away. So in theory everything in the universe is tugging on everything else. But: “Researchers have calculated that a mother holding her baby exerts 12 million times the tide-raising force on the child than the moon does, simply by virtue of being closer,” according to Straightdope.com, a Web site that applies logic and reason to myths and urban legends.

Consider also that tides in Earth’s oceans happen twice every day as Earth spins on its axis every 24 hours, bringing the moon constantly up and down in the sky. If the moon’s tugging affected the human body, one might presume we’d be off balance at least twice a day (and maybe we are).

Studies of full moon effects
Here are some of the reputable studies in peer-reviewed journals that have failed to find connections:

EPILEPSY: A study in the journal Epilepsy & Behavior in 2004 found no connection between epileptic seizures and the full moon, even though some patients believe their seizures to be trigged by the full moon. The researchers noted that epileptic seizures were once blamed on witchcraft and possession by demons, contributing to a longstanding human propensity to find mythical rather than medical explanations.

PSYCHIATRIC VISITS: A 2005 study by Mayo Clinic researchers, reported in the journal Psychiatric Services, looked at how many patients checked into a psychiatric emergency department between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m. over several years. They found no statistical difference in the number of visits on the three nights surrounding full moons vs. other nights.

EMERGENCY ROOM VISITS: Researchers examined 150,999 records of emergency room visits to a suburban hospital. Their study, reported in American Journal of Emergency Medicine in 1996, found no difference at full moon vs. other nights.

SURGERY OUTCOMES: Do doctors and nurses mess up more during the full moon? Not according to a study in the October 2009 issue of the journal Anesthesiology. In fact, researchers found the risks are the same no matter what day of the week or time of the month you schedule your coronary artery bypass graft surgery.

Not all studies dismiss lunar influence.

PET INJURIES: In studying 11,940 cases at the Colorado State University Veterinary Medical Center, researchers found the risk of emergency room visits to be 23 percent higher for cats and 28 percent higher for dogs on days surrounding full moons. It could be people tend to take pets out more during the full moon, raising the odds of an injury, or perhaps something else is at work – the study did not determine a cause.

MENSTRUATION: This is one of those topics on which you will find much speculation (some of it firm and convincing-sounding) and little evidence. The idea is that the moon is full every month and women menstruate monthly. Here’s the thing: Women’s menstrual cycles actually vary in length and timing – in some cases greatly – with the average being about every 28 days, while the lunar cycle is quite set at 29.5 days. Still, there is one study (of just 312 women), by Winnifred B. Cutler in 1980, published in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, that claims a connection. Cutler found 40 percent of participants had the onset of menstruation within two weeks of the full moon (which means 60 percent didn’t). If anyone can tell me how this oft-cited study proves anything, I’m all ears. Also, one should be skeptical that in the intervening 29 years, nobody seems to have produced a study supporting Cutler’s claim.

ANIMALS GONE WILD: A pair of conflicting studies in the British Medical Journal in 2001 leaves room for further research. In one of the studies, animal bites were found to have sent twice as many British people to the emergency room during full moons compared with other days. But in the other study, in Australia, dogs were found to bite people with similar frequency on any night.

SLEEP DEPRIVATION: In the Journal of Affective Disorders in 1999, researchers suggested that before modern lighting, “the moon was a significant source of nocturnal illumination that affected [the] sleep-wake cycle, tending to cause sleep deprivation around the time of full moon.” They speculated that “this partial sleep deprivation would have been sufficient to induce mania/hypomania in susceptible bipolar patients and seizures in patients with seizure disorders.” Best I can discern, however, these oft-cited suggestions have never been tested or verified with any numbers or rigorous study of any kind.

Myths persist

If one presumes that modern lighting and mini-blinds have pretty much eliminated the one plausible source of human-related moon madness, why do so many myths persist?

Several researchers point out one likely answer: When strange things happen at full moon, people notice the “coincidental” big bright orb in the sky and wonder. When strange things happen during the rest of the month, well, they’re just considered strange, and people don’t tie them to celestial events.

“If police and doctors are expecting that full moon nights will be more hectic, they may interpret an ordinary night’s traumas and crises as more extreme than usual,” explains our Bad Science Columnist Benjamin Radford. “Our expectations influence our perceptions, and we look for evidence that confirms our beliefs.”

And that leads to this final note, which is perhaps the biggest logical nail in the coffin of the moon madness myths:

The highest tides occur not just at full moon but also at new moon, when the moon is between Earth and the sun (and we cannot see the moon) and our planet feels the combined gravitational effect of these two objects. Yet nobody ever claims any funny stuff related to the new moon (except for the fact that there is more beach pollution at full and new moon …).
via http://www.livescience.com/

Saturday, September 26th, 2009

There are many online source you can find the help on the way to learn contemporary written and spoken English and the, for instance one of them is BNC, very large corpus, where you have chance to learn and check yourself. Now it has only recently been released for distribution to North America but it can be accessed by (purchased) CDROMs (not what we are talking about here), on a trial basis using the downloadable interface SARA, and in a simplified way, online, where you get the first 50 lines using the queried word or phrase (unless there are fewer in all the corpus–then you get all). Each word of the corpus is tagged for Part of Speech (produced using the CLAWS automated tagger); the “parts of speech” used are several times more numerous than the schoolbook 8 or 9; the largest set of tags (144) gives the fewest ambiguous taggings. The entire corpus is tagged with TEI markup and has a very thorough and useful guide to corpus analysis written by xx and Lou Burnard. This is online and can also be downloaded for study or purchased as a book from Oxford University Press. Just check http://corp.hum.ou.dk/corpustop.html

WordNe is also an on-line lexical reference system whose design is inspired by current psycholinguistic theories of human lexical memory. English nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are organized into synonym sets, each representing one underlying lexical concept. Different relations link the synonym sets.” It is a “thesaurus” on psycholinguistic principles developed by George A. Miller and others at Princeton. The on-line version takes words as input and returns synonyms, hypernyms, (if nouns) coordinate words (words with same hypernym); if verbs, it also returns troponyms (instead of hypernyms) and entailments. computes lexical spaces for different types of texts and reduces those spaces statistically to locate the key vocabulary in a space of (usually) several hundred vectors. It follows that what is a related word in one domain of discourse (say, Cardiology) will not necessarily be related in another domain (MesoAmerican History or Literary Criticism). Try, for example, heart. (Databases for only a few domains are available on line.)

If you are interested in computes lexical spaces for different types of texts and reduces LSA is spaces statistically to locate the key vocabulary in a space of (usually) several hundred vectors. It follows that what is a related word in one domain of discourse (say, Cardiology) will not necessarily be related in another domain (MesoAmerican History or Literary Criticism). Try, for example, heart. (Databases for only a few domains are available on line.)

Any sample of text can then be matched against the normal vector space and the degree of its “standardness” can be computed. LSA’s developers, headed by Walter Kintsch and Thomas K. Landauer at University of Colorado, claim that it is able to “recognise” student papers as proper to a particular disciplinary domain, and hence can function as an automatic paper grader. LSA goes far beyond a simple measure of the different lexical frequencies of words in different domains (i.e. a simple jargon-matcher) to measure the dependencies of word sets and chains. They claim to grade essays in the disciplines studied as reliably as ETS-trained graders. You can submit a paragraph and have it analyzed and graded. LSA inspires many who teach writing in the disciplines with extreme fear and loathing.

LSA will also compute the degree of lexical cohesion between pairs of sentences in connected text. Again, this is relative to a discursive domain, so that a text that may be quite cohesive in one domain, or in a general college-freshman reading level, may be less or more so in other domains.

More info about learning languages online you can find on Merry languages blog

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

Learning different kind of fruits together with your kids you can also try to make your kids eat more fruits and vegetables. Besodes that this is good idea to mix fruit juice with different kind of fruits and add a little ice cube put them in the blender to make smoothies. Sometime it’s easier to drink them than to eat them. Check my other article how to make smoothies.
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You can also use your favorite foods add vegetables puree in it, choose vegetables in the similar color of those food natural color, add a little bit of it not too much. You don’t want to make your favorite recipes taste totally different. After all you can choose for healthy snacks and/or desserts.
Something like: chips with guacamole or salsa, oatmeal cookie with raisin, carot cake, banana pudding, chocolate covered strawberry, fruit cake, waffle with fruit compote, banana split ice cream, etc.

There are many recipes how to make your kids eat good and healthy food just check out various cookbooks sites to pick up something the most one!

The Fruit Alphabet on http://www.thefruitpages.com/alphabet.shtml to print it out.

Monday, September 7th, 2009

The recent fast spreading of of the H1N1 virus, or Swine Flu, has raised the awareness level and children, spending a large portion of time daily in school, have higher risk to get the illness. There fore precautionary and preventive measures in schools need to be stronger than enywhere else. No doubt parents need to be especially aware of any health changes in their children, and address any new issues in a timely fashion with a health care professional besides that there are a lots of material they have to learn about swine flu signs and symptoms, how it’s transmitted, medicines to treat it, steps people can take to protect themselves from it, and what to do in case they become ill. One should not forget that strong immune system strengthen with receiving adequate rest and nutrition on a daily basis, frequent hand-washing, covering their mouths when they cough or sneeze and applying due diligence in a crowded areas as well play a great role in preventing the spread.

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

The school has started and I’m sure that all of us cared about our kids school supplies organizing in time. However here is the reminding list what we need for school craft lessons

It is glue, erasers, pencil sharpeners, crayons, and whatever kids have to use at the time must be on top.
Besides that don’t forget about
3 sheets yellow construction paper
2 sheet green construction paper
Acrylic paint (blue, red, green, brown, orange, yellow, black)
3” square box with lid
Plastic water bottle (12-16 oz)
School-themed foam stamps (school bus, apple, star, crayons)
1” x 7” strip of orange felt
Paintbrush
White craft glue
Glue stick
Clear tape
Scissors
Black marker

Be careful not to overload the top of your box by piling too many items inside.