MySDScience's – December 2011 Archive (13)

Scripps Research Study Underlines Potential of Anti-Stress Peptide to Block Alcohol Dependence

LA JOLLA, CA – December 9, 2011 – New research by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute has underlined the power of an endogenous anti-stress peptide in the brain to prevent and even reverse some of the cellular effects of acute alcohol and alcohol dependence in animal models. The work could lead to the development of novel drugs to treat alcoholism.

The new study, led by Scripps Research Associate Professor Marisa Roberto and now published online ahead of print by the…

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Added by MySDScience on December 9, 2011 at 3:30pm — No Comments

Nine UC San Diego Professors Named 2011 AAAS Fellows

Alexandra Newton, Joseph O’Connor, Carol Padden, Dena Plemmons, Jim Posakony, Michael Sailor, Lu Jeu Sham, Lisa Tauxe and Paul Yu were among 539 individuals selected this year by colleagues in their disciplines to be honored by the association for “efforts toward advancing science applications that are deemed scientifically or socially distinguished.”

The new Fellows, who were announced by the association this…

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Added by MySDScience on December 9, 2011 at 3:30pm — No Comments

Obituary: Jeffrey B. Graham 1941-2011



Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

Jeffrey B. Graham, a research physiologist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, died of cancer at his home in San Diego, Calif., on Dec. 8, 2011. He was 70 years old.





Jeffrey Graham

For nearly 50 years, Graham's research focused on the evolution, comparative physiology…

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Added by MySDScience on December 9, 2011 at 3:30pm — No Comments

New Approach to Management of Overeating in Children

Overeating, whether in children or adults, often takes place even in the absence of hunger, resulting in weight gain and obesity.  Current methods to treat such overeating in youth focus on therapies that restrict what kids may eat, requiring them to track their food intake and engage in intensive exercise.

But for most children, such behavioral therapy techniques don’t work long term, according to Kerri Boutelle, PhD, associate professor of…

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Added by MySDScience on December 7, 2011 at 3:30pm — No Comments

Salk researchers develop safe way to repair sickle cell disease genes

LA JOLLA, CA—Researchers at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies have developed a way to use patients' own cells to potentially cure sickle cell disease and many other disorders caused by mutations in a gene that helps produce blood hemoglobin.

The technique uses cells from a patient's skin to generate induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), which are capable of developing into various types of mature tissues—including blood. The scientists say their method,…

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Added by MySDScience on December 7, 2011 at 3:30pm — No Comments

Scientists Decipher Forces Driving Mountain Formation

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

The world's longest mountain chain stretches along the entire west coast of South America, but scientists have been struggling to explain how it formed.



Published Dec. 1 in Nature, research led by Fabio Capitanio of Monash University's School of Geosciences, Dave Stegman of Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego and others

describes new results of computer…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:57pm — No Comments

Researchers at Scripps and colleagues argue that geoengineering responses to climate change need to assess ecosystem impacts before being tried

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

If the world must resort to geoengineering as a means of mitigating dangerous effects of anthropogenic climate change, how well would it understand what it is getting itself into?



Since Nobel Prize-winning physicist Paul Crutzen, formerly a researcher at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, lent credence to the idea of conducting large-scale efforts to influence Earth's…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

Mobile Earthquake Network Widens Pulse Readings on Planet

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

It's no secret that scientists have extracted an abundance of data from the National Science Foundation's EarthScope-USArray and its unique transportable seismic network of 400 sensor stations leapfrogging across the United States.



But now scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego are

piggybacking onto the mobile network with instruments that go beyond…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

Is Black Carbon Underestimated as a Global Warming Agent?

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

Satellites have measured black carbon emissions generated by millions of wood-burning stoves throughout the developing world, but a project taking place in India's Uttar Pradesh province suggests the atmospheric heating effect of these soot emissions are at least twice as large as reported by many IPCC models.



Veerabhadran Ramanathan

Veerabhadran…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

A 2009 storm transporting Asian dust to California created more precipitation than another Asian storm dominated by soot from biomass burning.

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

Researchers in a wide-ranging project to understand the climate forces that influence California's water supply found evidence that the character of aerosols carried across the Pacific affects how much precipitation winter storms produce.



Storms spaced one week apart from each other during February and March 2009 delivered one-fourth of the year's snowfall at a Sierra Nevada…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

Scripps News at 2011 AGU Fall Meeting

Is the Risk of Big Earthquakes on the Rise?

S11A-2186 · Monday, Dec. 5, 8 a.m. - 12:20 p.m. · Moscone Halls A-C

From March's devastating magnitude 9.0 earthquake in Japan to last year's 8.8 quake off Chile and the 9.0 Sumatra-Andaman event of 2004, seismologists have recently wondered whether such massive events are on the rise. Perhaps such giant quakes are not independent, random events, but rather somehow connected, even triggering one another?…



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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

Hybrid GPS-Seismic System Aims to Accelerate Earthquake Hazard Response

Scripps Institution of Oceanography / University of California, San Diego

Japanese seismologists required approximately 20 minutes to accurately determine the full magnitude of last March's massive earthquake off Japan, precious moments for disaster response activation. Now scientists at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego are developing a next-generation detection system they believe could drastically shrink that assessment time down to two to three…

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Added by MySDScience on December 5, 2011 at 1:30pm — No Comments

SDSC Researcher Amarnath Gupta Named an ACM Distinguished Scientist



Amarnath Gupta, San Diego Supercomputer, UC San Diego

Amarnath Gupta, a researcher with the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) at the University of California, San Diego, has been named a Distinguished Scientist by the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), the world’s largest educational and scientific computing society.

The Distinguished Scientist grade recognizes ACM members who have at least 15 years of…

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Added by MySDScience on December 1, 2011 at 2:00pm — No Comments

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