Monday, January 16, 2012

Bacon linked to cancer and other heartbreaking news | Seattle's Big ...

(Getty Images)

What the heck, bacon? I thought we were friends. So, what?s this I hear about Swedish scientists blaming you for pancreatic cancer?

I feel so betrayed.

In all fairness, the findings of this study aren?t terribly conclusive. But research suggests the consumption of processed meat such as sausage and bacon is higher among those who contract certain types of cancer.

Scientists admit bacon?s cousin ?obesity? might have something to do with that, and that processed meat may be fine in moderation.

Read more from the BBC: ?Processed meat ?linked to pancreatic cancer.??

Visit seattlepi.com?s home page for more Seattle news. Contact Amy Rolph at amyrolph@seattlepi.com or on Twitter as @amyrolph and @bigblog.

What the heck, bacon? I thought we were friends. So, what?s this I hear about Swedish scientists blaming you for pancreatic cancer?

I feel so betrayed.

In all fairness, the findings of this study aren?t terribly conclusive. But research suggests the consumption of processed meat such as sausage and bacon is higher among those who contract certain types of cancer.

continue reading

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/thebigblog/2012/01/16/bacon-linked-to-cancer-and-other-heartbreaking-news/

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Jet Lag: What's Causing One of the Driest, Warmest Winters in History?

WEATHER MAKER: An unusual region of atmospheric pressure over the Arctic has kept the polar jet stream (green) locked up at far northern latitudes, causing a warm, dry U.S. winter. Image: Courtesy of NOAA

A little snow and rain are falling in a few states today, but the 2011?12 winter has been extremely warm and dry across the continental U.S. Meteorologists think they have figured out why.

First, a few records: The initial week of January was the driest in history. And more than 95 percent of the U.S. had below-average snow cover?the greatest such percentage ever recorded?according to some intriguing data maps generated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. During December, approximately half of the U.S. had temperatures at least 5 degrees Fahrenheit above average, and more than 1,500 daily record highs were set from January 2 to 8. Europe has seen similar extremes.

The chief suspect behind the mysterious weather is an atmospheric pressure pattern called the Arctic Oscillation, which circles the high Northern Hemisphere. Its lower edge is known as the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Together, the related features influence the path and strength of the jet stream. The jet itself is an air current that flows west to east across the northern latitudes of the U.S., Europe and Asia, altering temperature and precipitation as portions of it dip southward or crest northward. A strong jet stream that flows in a somewhat straight line from west to east, with few southward dips, prevents cold arctic air from drifting south. "The cause of this warm first half of winter is the most extreme configuration of the jet stream ever recorded," according to Jeffrey Masters, a meteorologist who runs the Weather Underground, a Web site that analyzes severe weather data.

By "extreme," Masters means that the jet stream was far north and fairly straight, and stayed that way for an unusually long time. That position allowed warm southern air to prevail over the entire U.S., and prevented cold fronts from descending from the north and clashing with warm fronts, creating large snow- and rainstorms. The jet stream has been locked in that position by the NAO for most of the winter, and Masters says it has sustained the largest pressure gradient since tracking began in 1865.

Conversely, December 2010 set record snowfalls in many parts of the U.S. Sure enough, the NAO at that time had some of the lowest pressures ever observed, allowing the jet stream to move south and stay there. Arctic air descended, picked up moisture or interacted with warm fronts, and dropped snow. "The December Arctic Oscillation index has fluctuated wildly over the past six years," Masters notes, "with the two most extreme positive and two most extreme negative values on record." Data for the trends is available at the Weather Underground site.

Meteorologists are not certain what causes the oscillations to vary so ?dramatically. Some scientists say the loss of Arctic sea ice due to global warming is causing the Arctic Oscillation to drop in pressure. Others have noticed a correlation with sunspot activity, which was very low in December 2010 and very high during December 2011, although they haven't proposed a mechanism whereby sunspots would directly alter the Arctic Oscillation.

Of course, winter has many weeks to go, so the oscillations, and U.S. weather, could shift. But if plentiful precipitation does not fall, complications could arise for many more people than ski resort owners and their patrons. A small snowpack often leads to spring droughts in the Midwest and summer water shortages in the West as well as a longer wildfire season in the latter because the soil dries out earlier than usual.

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=264e405fb36798d3bc360a13628612db

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Friday, January 13, 2012

Vizio expands Google TV lineup to include HDTVs and Blu-ray players

Vizio

In addition to the Vizio VAP430 media streamer we mentioned, Vizio is also looking to bring a better Google TV experience to HDTVs and Blu-ray players by expanding their efforts there.

  • Smart Blu-ray - As part of the VIZIO Internet Apps Plus ecosystem, the VBR430 Blu-ray lets users access video, audio and photos stored on any DLNA-compatible computer, network-connected hard drive or cell phone connected to a home network. Built-in WiFi makes network connection easy, and Bluetooth capability provides yet another conduit for streaming media from cell phones and computers.
  • Smart TV Plus 3D - VIZIO's V.I.A. Plus products will also include Theater 3D technology, for crystal clear, brighter and flicker-free 3D, viewable with lightweight, comfortable, battery-free 3D glasses. The TVs feature LED backlighting with smart dimming technology to achieve dynamic contrast ratios of 1,000,000:1 or greater.

Vizio is working hard with folks and announcing new partners who are collaborating to bring their content and services to the V.I.A. Platform. The full press release can be found past the break for you all.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/i9H-Pbdfjl0/story01.htm

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Thursday, January 12, 2012

Banks deposit record amount overnight at ECB

(AP) ? Banks in the countries that use the euro held a record amount of money overnight at the European Central Bank in a sign of stress in the financial system from the eurozone debt crisis.

The region's central bank said Tuesday that overnight deposits from Monday hit euro481.93 billion ($613.4 billion) ? beating the previous record of euro463.56 billion from the day before.

The high deposits mean banks are keeping spare cash in a safe place at a low interest rate rather than lending it one another on a short-term basis. This move has sparked fears of a further credit crunch across Europe as banks become wary about lending funds for fear they will not be paid back.

The deposits also reflect large amounts of cash put into the banking system by the ECB in its efforts to steady the system. An ECB offer of emergency three-year loans resulted in euro489 billion being taken up by more than 500 banks in late December.

The climate of anxiety means that some of that loaned money ? on which the ECB currently charges 1 percent annual interest ? is washing back into the ECB overnight deposit facility even though it only earns 0.25 percent.

Europe's government debt crisis has put intense pressure on the banking system, because banks typically hold government bonds. Fears that a heavily indebted government may default ? and cause losses on those bonds ? has left many banks viewed as poor credit risks and unable to borrow from any one but the ECB.

Additionally, many banks have bonds coming due in the first months of the year and will need cash for that if they cannot sell new bonds to pay off the old ones.

Meanwhile, political leaders are still working on measures aimed at containing the crisis. Governments have yet to agree on a proposed treaty to toughen limits on future debt, and are trying to raise an additional euro150 billion to backstop financially troubled governments through the International Monetary Fund. Greece is negotiating with bondholders about a 50 percent write-off of their investments, a step aimed at getting the country's heavy debt load down to a sustainable level.

"With sovereign debt uncertainties still unresolved and banks facing heavy bond redemptions in the first months of the year, it is not difficult to understand why banks remain risk-averse and prefer to hoard liquidity," Marco Valli, chief eurozone economist at UniCredit, said in a note to investors.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-01-10-EU-European-Central-Bank/id-2d51e2d9c13d43c5bb4ce0ea695e4585

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Obama uncle seeks police officer's driving record (AP)

BOSTON ? A lawyer for President Barack Obama's uncle, an illegal immigrant who is charged with drunken driving, says he will ask prosecutors to turn over the driving record of the police officer who stopped him.

Onyango (ohn-YAHN'-goh) Obama, the half brother of the president's late father, was charged with drunken driving in Framingham in August after he allegedly rolled through a stop sign and nearly caused a police cruiser to strike his SUV.

Obama's lawyer said Wednesday that he will ask prosecutors for Officer Val Krishtal's driving record. A court hearing is scheduled for Thursday.

Krishtal was injured in November when he lost control of his police cruiser and crashed into a stone wall while responding to reports of gunshots.

Framingham police declined to comment Wednesday. A spokeswoman for prosecutors said they would respond in court.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/obama/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120111/ap_on_re_us/us_obama_s_uncle_arrest

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Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Ohio State Football: 9 Reasons Why the Buckeyes Struggled in 2011

One of the biggest problems throughout the season has been the exposure of former offensive coordinator Jim Bollman.

His poor coaching skills had been masked behind Tressel, but was shown when Tressel was forced out of his job.

He had been the offensive line coach for a decade and his poor coaching showed as the offensive line looked terrible, even with the type of talent Ohio State could bring in on the line.

His play-calling was predictable and he did a poor job of developing talent and protecting his quarterbacks.

Bollman is moving on to Boston College as the offensive line coach, and thankfully an era of poor offensive coaching is over at Ohio State.

Not too much is known about what new offensive coordinator Tom Herman, formerly at Rice and Iowa State, can do with good personnel.

However, it certainly will be?at worst?a little better than the 2011 offense.

?

Follow me on Twitter @bielik_tim for the latest college football news and updates.

Source: http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1016175-ohio-state-football-the-9-reasons-why-the-buckeyes-struggled-in-2011

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Tuesday, January 10, 2012

TELUS says the Samsung Galaxy Note is ?coming soon?

TELUS says the Samsung Galaxy Note is ?coming soon?


Well, well, well. This is a turn of events. I just received a very welcome email from TELUS. The Samsung Galaxy Note will be heading towards TELUS. Yes, TELUS! This will be launching on their HSPA+ network, but will be available when their LTE network launches ?later this quarter?. No word on price points, or a release date? but I?ve been hearing February.

I thought you would be interested in this ?coming soon? to TELUS announcement. TELUS will soon be adding to their Galaxy family with the upcoming Samsung Galaxy Note, which Samsung debuted at the Consumer Electronics Show today.

With an amazing, immersive 5.3?super AMOLED screen, the Samsung Galaxy Note will expand the boundaries of the smartphone category, while still maintaining portability with a light and thin 9.5mm design. But that?s not all that?s different about this smartphone: it also features the digital ?S pen? ? a unique tool that allows users to sketch, create, and enhance their experience on that huge screen with the precision and accuracy of a real pen.

Powered by Android 2.3, the Samsung Galaxy Note offers a powerful 1.4GHz dual core processor for a powerhouse performance users expect from a top of the line Galaxy device. Equipped with an 8MP rear facing camera with flash and a 2MP front facing camera, the Samsung Galaxy Note allows users to enjoy video calling as well as HD photo and video recording.

The Samsung Galaxy Note is an LTE device that will also run nationally on TELUS? coast-to-coast HSPA+ network (which covers 97% of the Canadian population), so TELUS customers across Canada can enjoy it virtually anywhere and will be future-proofed for the LTE network when that is launched later this quarter.

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Mobilesyrup/~3/5F2E9m3_LTo/

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Monday, January 9, 2012

Fla. Senator Files Bill Targeting Insurance Fraud ? CBS Tampa

Aerial view showing stuck cars on the highway A31 near Heek, westnorthern Germany on November 19, 2011 after an accident involved 52 cars.  (Photo credit: OLF VENNENBERND/AFP/Getty Images)

Aerial view showing stuck cars on the highway A31 near Heek, westnorthern Germany on November 19, 2011 after an accident involved 52 cars. (Photo credit: OLF VENNENBERND/AFP/Getty Images)

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) ? Legislation designed to crack down on the fraud that leads to more expensive personal injury protection insurance required of all Florida drivers was filed by state Sen. Joe Negron on Monday.

Negron?s bill (SB 1860) targets fraud issues that have resulted in skyrocketing premiums in some metropolitan areas of Florida. Some estimates say the fraud costs Floridians $1 billion annually. In some neighborhoods in the TampaBay area and South Florida, the coverage can add several hundred dollars annually to auto insurance premiums, a cost that?s almost entirely the result of rampant fraud.

Two PIP proposals (HB 119 and HB 523) were filed by House members in November.

With so many stakeholders involved, lawmakers have been unsuccessful over the past 15 years in finding a fix for the PIP problem. Trial lawyers, insurance companies and a variety of health care providers are among those trying to recover some of their costs covered in car injuries.

Negron, R-Stuart, wants to close the licensure loophole that currently exists for clinics and establish a fee schedule for reimbursements. It would also modernize the current system for bill payment. His measure also would give hospitals priority standing in PIP claims. Hospitals are typically the first to provide care after an automobile accident.

Reforming the state?s PIP insurance is also one of Gov. Rick Scott?s key goals for the upcoming legislative session that begins Tuesday.

Just last week, state officials said a recent investigation in Miami-Dade County alone uncovered regulatory violations in 43 of 49 pain clinics, where virtually all of their business was treating automobile accident victims. However, during those checks, investigators witnessed only 17 patients while employees at some clinics reported they had never seen a patient.

PIP was adopted in 1972 to provide benefits in a timely manner for a person injured in an automobile accident regardless of who was at fault, but schemers have turned Florida into the No. 1 state for staged accidents. The legislation provides that a driver?s insurance company pay up to $10,000 to cover medical bills and lost wages after an accident.

?

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.

Source: http://tampa.cbslocal.com/2012/01/09/fla-senator-files-bill-targeting-insurance-fraud/

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Glass of Red Wine a Day Could Keep Breast Cancer Away, Says New Cedars-Sinai Research

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    Sunday, January 8, 2012

    Saturday, January 7, 2012

    Between the Lines (TIME)

    Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

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    On CNN, Tiny YouTube Star Battling Cancer Meets Her Idol | Mediaite

    Video

    Friday?s edition of CNN Newsroom brings us the story of Tori Svenson, a little girl who became a YouTube sensation for a song she performed in the midst of undergoing chemo treatments.

    Tori had once competed in a beauty pageant as a means of raising money to help a little girl in her town who was battling cancer. But the day Tori brought over the money she?d raised, she discovered she had a brain tumor. One day, while at the hospital, Tori decided to lift her spirits, performing ?I?ll Be The Angel By Your Side,? a song by her favorite Christian singer, Francesca Battistelli.

    Today, Tori was able to meet Francesca and tell her, face-to-face, exactly how much the singer?s work means to her.

    RELATED: Here?s Something Nice: Two Adorable Girls Are Surprised By Their Hero Nicki Minaj On Ellen

    ?This is what it?s all about, right here,? Francesca replied, looking at Tori. ?So I am the blessed one, by you. Absolutely.?

    Have a look, via CNN. And, here, don?t use your sleeve. Have a tissue:

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    Source: http://www.mediaite.com/tv/on-cnn-tiny-youtube-star-battling-cancer-meets-her-idol-christian-singer-francesca-battistelli/

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    Friday, January 6, 2012

    modernghanaweb: Newmont Outlines Community Investment Programs for Conga Project in Peru: DENVER, January 5, 2012/PRNewswire via... http://t.co/h8CZncDQ

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    Thursday, January 5, 2012

    SC police: Mother won't tell them where son is (AP)

    COLUMBIA, S.C. ? A former college student who became depressed and erratic after becoming a mother is charged with lying about where her missing 18-month-old son has been for more than a month, police said Wednesday.

    Authorities said they were desperately searching for Amir Jennings after his 22-year-old mother, Zinah Jennings, told them several inconsistent and false stories about the boy being with relatives and friends in South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia.

    "I'm trying to stay optimistic about this," Columbia Police Chief Randy Scott told The Associated Press Wednesday. "But short of being optimistic, this case bothers me."

    The mother and son were reported missing in early December, but the mother turned up after she was involved in a car accident on Christmas Eve.

    Scott said officers hope a tip line and media exposure will lead to more information.

    "I want someone to call us and say, `We just saw this on the news, we have Amir, we're sorry, we didn't realize this was going on,'" he said. "Her stories are so across the board that our search right now is from Charlotte to Atlanta."

    Investigators said they hoped Amir Jennings was alive but they weren't getting much help from his mother. In early December, grandmother Jocelyn Jennings Nelson reported her own daughter missing, saying that she hadn't seen her in several days and hadn't seen her grandson since the Thanksgiving holiday.

    According to an incident report, Jennings had had a car wreck several days before and had been making "cryptic phone calls to other family members indicating her ongoing fight with depression is continuing."

    That sort of behavior wasn't unusual for the young mother, according to relatives, who told investigators the one-time college student had begun disappearing for days on end, with her son, since his birth.

    "The grandmother told me specifically that, when she was in school, she was a very good person, a very good student," said Scott, adding that relatives had previously filed several missing persons reports on Jennings. "But once the baby was born, the conduct kind of changed."

    Jennings attended Winthrop University in Rock Hill, S.C., for one academic year, from fall 2007 until spring 2008, according to a school spokeswoman.

    Early on the morning of Christmas Eve, Jennings wrecked her Dodge Neon in a one-car accident near her house in Columbia. Authorities learned that Jennings was reported missing and they say Jennings began giving shaky stories about her son's whereabouts. They also spoke with Amir's father, who told them he had seen the boy during Thanksgiving but generally has had little contact with the boy.

    "First it's, `He's with my sister in Atlanta. Oh no, I'm sorry, he's with my friend in Charlotte,'" Scott said. "It's all over the place. ... Everything she's telling us is just lies."

    Several days later, police again spoke with Jennings, who said her son was with a friend in Columbia, but that story was also a dead end. After days of giving police bad information, the mother was charged Dec. 29 with unlawful conduct toward a child and is being held on $150,000 bond.

    The police chief said he did not know if Jennings had an attorney. The number listed for both Jennings and her mother was not working, and the grandmother did not immediately return a message left on her work number. Police have not released the name of Amir's father.

    At this point, Scott said investigators have two theories.

    "It's either A: Zinah has given Amir to someone. Or Zinah has, in some way, shape or form, harmed Amir," Scott said. "Until we have something more on Amir, I do not rule out foul play. And in my mind, there's already an air of foul play, because no one will tell us where Amir is at. Foul play doesn't have to mean that someone is deceased. Foul play is lying to police."

    Scott said he's struggling to remain optimistic that Amir will be found unharmed. He would not discuss any evidence police have collected from the mother's home or car.

    "It's the way this whole case is playing out," Scott said. "It's more than just that the child is missing. The mother is lying about the whereabouts of the child."

    There was no answer Wednesday at the blue two-story home where police say Jennings, her mother and son live, its door and front porch still festooned with Christmas decorations. The house, just a few blocks from one of Columbia's busiest thoroughfares, is on a quiet, tree-lined street of other one- and two-story homes, some with fenced-in yards and porches.

    "We see each other and speak and say hello," said Selwyn Young, who lives across the street from the Jennings family and said he recalled seeing Jennings pushing the baby around the neighborhood and walking the family's dog. "Hopefully they find him. Hopefully they get it right."

    ___

    Kinnard can be reached at http://twitter.com/MegKinnardAP

    ___

    Online:

    SC Crimestoppers: http://www.sccrimestoppers.com/

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120104/ap_on_re_us/us_sc_missing_boy

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    Sanwa pico projector also charges your iPhone

    Apple's been making inroads with enterprise users for some time, and now Sanwa's giving the iPhone some serious presentation chops with its new pico projector. The 400-PRJ011 is compatible with both the iPhone 4 and the 4S, powered by its own 2,100mAh battery and also charges your iPhone's battery whenever you turn the projector function off. It's got a five hour charge time, can provide 2.5 hours of steady projection and throws images on the wall up to 65-inches in size at 640 × 360 resolution and a 1,000:1 contrast ratio. A global release date has yet to be announced, but our Japanese friends can pick one up for ¥19,800 ($260).

    Sanwa pico projector also charges your iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Jan 2012 01:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Wednesday, January 4, 2012

    What Vietnam Taught Us About Breaking Bad Habits

    U.S. soldiers at Long Binh base, northeast of Saigon, line up to give urine samples at a heroin detection center in June 1971, before departing for the U.S. AP

    U.S. soldiers at Long Binh base, northeast of Saigon, line up to give urine samples at a heroin detection center in June 1971, before departing for the U.S.

    It's a tradition as old as New Year's: making resolutions. We will not smoke, or sojourn with the bucket of mint chocolate chip. In fact, we will resist sweets generally, including the bowl of M &Ms that our co-worker has helpfully positioned on the aisle corner of his desk. There will be exercise, and the learning of a new language.

    It is resolved.

    So what does science know about translating our resolve into actual changes in behavior? The answer to this question brings us ? strangely enough ? to a story about heroin use in Vietnam.

    People, when they perform a behavior a lot, outsource the control of the behavior to the environment.

    ?

    In May of 1971 two congressmen, Robert Steele from Connecticut and Morgan Murphy of Illinois, went to Vietnam for an official visit and returned with some extremely disturbing news: 15 percent of U.S. servicemen in Vietnam, they said, were actively addicted to heroin.

    The idea that so many servicemen were addicted to heroin horrified the public. At that point heroin was the bete noire of American drugs. It was thought to be the most addictive substance ever produced, a narcotic so powerful that once addiction claimed you, it was nearly impossible to escape.

    In response to this report, President Richard Nixon took action. In June of 1971 he announced that he was creating a whole new office ? The Special Action Office of Drug Abuse Prevention ? dedicated to fighting the evil of drugs. He laid out a program of prevention and rehabilitation, but there was something else Nixon wanted: He wanted to research what happened to the addicted servicemen once they returned home.

    And so Jerome Jaffe, whom Nixon had appointed to run the new office, contacted a well-respected psychiatric researcher named Lee Robins and asked her to help with the study. He promised her unprecedented access to enlisted men in the Army so that she could get the job done.

    Soon a comprehensive system was set up so that every enlisted man was tested for heroin addiction before he was allowed to return home. And in this population, Robins did find high rates of addiction: Around 20 percent of the soldiers self-identified as addicts.

    Those who were addicted were kept in Vietnam until they dried out. When these soldiers finally did return to their lives back in the U.S., Robins tracked them, collecting data at regular intervals. And this is where the story takes a curious turn: According to her research, the number of soldiers who continued their heroin addiction once they returned to the U.S. was shockingly low.

    A GI lights up a cigarette in Saigon in 1971. He poured grains of heroin into the menthol cigarette, from which he had first removed some of the tobacco. Enlarge AP

    A GI lights up a cigarette in Saigon in 1971. He poured grains of heroin into the menthol cigarette, from which he had first removed some of the tobacco.

    AP

    A GI lights up a cigarette in Saigon in 1971. He poured grains of heroin into the menthol cigarette, from which he had first removed some of the tobacco.

    "I believe the number of people who actually relapsed to heroin use in the first year was about 5 percent," Jaffe said recently from his suburban Maryland home. In other words, 95 percent of the people who were addicted in Vietnam did not become re-addicted when they returned to the United States.

    This flew in the face of everything everyone knew both about heroin and drug addiction generally. When addicts were treated in the U.S. and returned to their homes, relapse rates hovered around 90 percent. It didn't make sense.

    "Everyone thought there was somehow she was lying, or she did something wrong, or she was politically influenced," Jaffe says. "She spent months, if not years, trying to defend the integrity of the study."

    But 40 years later, the findings of this study are widely accepted. To explain why, you need to understand how the science of behavior change has itself changed.

    Outsourcing The Control Of Behavior

    According to Wendy Wood, a psychologist at University of Southern California who researches behavior change, throughout the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s scientists believed that if you wanted to change behavior, the key was to change people's goals and intentions.

    "The research was very much focused on trying to understand how to change people's attitudes," Wood says, "with the assumption that behavior change would just follow."

    So researchers studied how to organize public health campaigns, or how to use social pressure to change attitudes. And, says David Neal, another psychologist who looks at behavior change, these strategies did work.

    Mostly.

    "They do work for a certain subset of behaviors," Neal says. "They work for behaviors that people don't perform too frequently."

    If you want, for example, to increase the number of people who donate blood, a public campaign can work well. But if you want them to quit smoking, campaigns intended to change attitudes are often less effective.

    "Once a behavior had been repeated a lot, especially if the person does it in the same setting, you can successfully change what people want to do. But if they've done it enough, their behavior doesn't follow their intentions," Neal explains.

    Neal says this has to do with the way that over time, our physical environments come to shape our behavior.

    "People, when they perform a behavior a lot ? especially in the same environment, same sort of physical setting ? outsource the control of the behavior to the environment," Neal says.

    Outsourcing control over your behavior sounds a little funny. But understand consider what happens when you perform a very basic everyday behavior like getting into a car.

    "Of course on one level, that seems like the simplest task possible," Neal says, "but if you break it down, there's really a myriad set of complex actions that are performed in sequence to do that."

    You use a certain motion to put your key in the lock. And then physically manipulate your body to get into the seat. There is another set of motions to insert the key in the ignition.

    "All of this is actually very complicated and someone who had never driven a car before would have no ability to do that, but it becomes second nature to us," Neal points out. "[It's] so automatic that we can do it while we are conducting complex other tasks, like having conversations."

    Throughout the process, you haven't thought for a second about what you are doing, you are just responding to the different parts of the car in the sequence you've learned. "And very much of our day goes off in this way," Wood says. "About 45 percent of what people do every day is in the same environment and is repeated."

    Environment's Key Role In Behavior

    In this way, Neal says, our environments come to unconsciously direct our behavior. Even behaviors that we don't want, like smoking.

    "For a smoker the view of the entrance to their office building ? which is a place that they go to smoke all the time ? becomes a powerful mental cue to go and perform that behavior," Neal says.

    And over time those cues become so deeply ingrained that they are very hard to resist. And so we smoke at the entrance to work when we don't want to. We sit on the couch and eat ice cream when we don't need to, despite our best intentions, despite our resolutions.

    "We don't feel sort of pushed by the environment," Wood says. "But, in fact, we're very integrated with it."

    To battle bad behaviors then, one answer, Neal and Wood say, is to disrupt the environment in some way. Even small change can help ? like eating the ice cream with your non-dominant hand. What this does is alter the action sequence and disrupts the learned body sequence that's driving the behavior, which allows your conscious mind to come back online and reassert control.

    "It's a brief sort of window of opportunity," Wood says, "to think, 'Is this really what I want to do?' "

    Of course, larger disruption can also be helpful, which brings us back to heroin addiction in Vietnam.

    It's important not to overstate this, because a variety of factors are probably at play. But one big theory about why the rates of heroin relapse were so low on return to the U.S. has to do with the fact that the soldiers, after being treated for their physical addiction in Vietnam, returned to a place radically different from the environment where their addiction took hold of them.

    "I think that most people accept that the change in the environment, and the fact that the addiction occurred in this exotic environment, you know, makes it plausible that the addiction rate would be that much lower," Nixon appointee Jerome Jaffe says.

    We think of ourselves as controlling our behavior, willing our actions into being, but it's not that simple.

    It's as if over time, we leave parts of ourselves all around us, which in turn, come to shape who we are.

    Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2012/01/02/144431794/what-vietnam-taught-us-about-breaking-bad-habits?ft=1&f=1007

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    Tuesday, January 3, 2012

    Barclays upgrade Micron, shares jump (Reuters)

    (Reuters) ? Shares of Micron Technology Inc climbed as much as 11 percent after Barclays Capital raised the chip devices maker's stock to "overweight," even as the brokerage downgraded five other stocks from the sector, including Intel Corp.

    Barclays said it expects Micron to benefit from higher pricing of Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) and stronger PC sales, likely from the second half of the year. Shares of the company, which was valued at $6.2 billion, were trading up 9 percent at $6.88 around midday on Nasdaq after touching a high of $6.96 in morning trade.

    Barclays lowered its ratings on Intel, Applied Materials Inc, Freescale Semiconductor Holdings Ltd, Microchip Technology Inc and Spansion Inc to "equal weight" from "overweight."

    The brokerage, however, left its rating for the U.S. semiconductor capital equipment sector unchanged at "neutral."

    Barclays also retained its "positive" rating on the U.S. semiconductor sector, and said it expects semiconductor stocks to outperform end markets in the second half of 2012 and to grow at 6 to 8 percent in 2013.

    "First quarter should be the trough for semis given the ongoing inventory correction, coupled with supply chain constraints, due to muted end demand visibility," Barclays analyst C.J. Muse wrote in a note to clients.

    Muse now expects U.S. semiconductor revenue growth to come in flat to 4 percent in 2012. He had earlier forecast growth of 2 to 5 percent.

    According to Thomson Reuters' Starmine data, Muse is a four star-rated analyst for the accuracy of his earnings estimates on the companies under his coverage universe, which include Intel and Applied Materials.

    The Philadelphia semiconductor index fell 12 percent since the start of 2011 to end the year at 364.44 points, as the industry was hit by disruptions in supply chains with the earthquake and tsunami in Japan and flooding in Thailand. (Reporting by Rachel Chitra and Ashutosh Pandey in Bangalore; Editing by Tenzin Pema and Joyjeet Das)

    Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/semiconductor/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120103/tc_nm/us_ustechnology_research_barclays

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    It's never been safer to fly; deaths at record low

    Boarding an airplane has never been safer.

    The past 10 years have been the best in the country's aviation history with 153 fatalities. That's two deaths for every 100 million passengers on commercial flights, according to an Associated Press analysis of government accident data.

    The improvement is remarkable. Just a decade earlier, at the time the safest, passengers were 10 times as likely to die when flying on an American plane. The risk of death was even greater during the start of the jet age, with 1,696 people dying ? 133 out of every 100 million passengers ? from 1962 to 1971. The figures exclude acts of terrorism.

    Sitting in a pressurized, aluminum tube seven miles above the ground may never seem like the most-natural thing. But consider this: You are more likely to die driving to the airport than flying across the country. There are more than 30,000 motor-vehicle deaths each year, a mortality rate eight times greater than that in planes.

    "I wouldn't say air crashes of passenger airliners are a thing of the past. They're simply a whole lot more rare than they used to be," says Todd Curtis, a former safety engineer with Boeing and director of the Airsafe.com Foundation.

    The improvements came even as the industry went through a miserable financial period, losing $54.5 billion in the past decade. Just to stay afloat, airlines eliminated meals and added fees for checked luggage.

    But safety remained a priority. No advertisement of tropical beaches can supplant the image of charred metal scattered across a field.

    There are still some corners of the world where flying is risky. Russia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Somalia have particularly high rates of deadly crashes. Russia had several fatal crashes in the past year, including one that killed several prominent hockey players. Africa only accounts for 3 percent of world air traffic but had 14 percent of fatal crashes.

    Still, 2011 was a good year to fly. It had the second-fewest number of fatalities worldwide, according to the Flight Safety Foundation, with 507 people dying in crashes. Seven out of 28 planes in fatal crashes were on airlines already prohibited from flying into European Union because of known safety problems. (There were fewer fatalities in 2004 ? 323 ? but there were also fewer people flying then.)

    There are a number of reasons for the improvements.

    ? The industry has learned from the past. New planes and engines are designed with prior mistakes in mind. Investigations of accidents have led to changes in procedures to ensure the same missteps don't occur again.

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    ? Better sharing of information. New databases allow pilots, airlines, plane manufactures and regulators to track incidents and near misses. Computers pick up subtle trends. For instance, a particular runway might have a higher rate of aborted landings when there is fog. Regulators noticing this could improve lighting and add more time between landings.

    ? Safety audits by outside firms. The International Air Transport Association, an industry trade group, started an audit program in 2003. Airlines prove to the industry and each other that they have proper maintenance and safety procedures. It's also a way for airlines to seek lower insurance premiums, which have also dropped over the past 10 years.

    ? An experienced workforce. Air traffic controllers, pilots and maintenance crews ? particularly in North America and Europe ? have been on the job for decades. Their experience is crucial when split-second decisions are made and for instilling a culture of safety in younger employees. Former US Airways Capt. Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger ? who spent three decades as an airline pilot ? was praised for his skill after safely ditching a plane in the Hudson River in 2009. Both engines died because of a bird strike but all 155 passengers and crew survived.

    ? Luck. Safety experts discount the effect of chance. However, it takes just one big accident ? especially now with mega-jets such as the Airbus A380, which is able to carry up to 853 passengers ? to ruin an otherwise good period for safety.

    "Was Chesley Sullenberger lucky or skillful?" says Perry Flint, a spokesman with the International Air Transport Association. "It was luck that it was daylight, but how many geese do you know that are flying south in the pitch black of two in the morning? So it was also luck that he hit them. Bad luck."

    The most recent fatal U.S. crash was Colgan Air Flight 3407, a regional flight operating under the name Continental Connection. The 2009 crash killed all 49 people on board and a man in the house the plane hit.

    In fact, all fatal crashes in the U.S. in the past decade occurred on regional airlines, which are separate companies flying smaller planes under brands such as United Express, American Eagle and Delta Connection. The most recent deadly crash involving a larger airline was American Airlines Flight 587 in 2001. It crashed moments after taking off from New York, killing 265.

    There have been some near misses.

    In April, a Southwest Airlines aircraft had a rapid loss of cabin pressure after part of the fuselage ruptured, leaving a five-foot-long hole in the ceiling. There were no serious injuries.

    The prior year, a Southwest jet came within 200 feet of colliding with a small Cessna at a California airport. In December 2009, an American Airlines jet landing in the rain in Jamaica was unable to stop on the runway, crashing through an airport fence, crossing a street, finally stopping on a beach. And in December 2005, a Southwest jet skidded off a Chicago runway. No passengers died, but a 9-year-old boy riding in a passing car was killed.

    A poor economy might also have improved safety.

    Bill Voss, president of the Flight Safety Foundation, says that during a boom period, airlines tend to quickly grow. That, he says, can mean weaker standards for safety and for pilots.

    "We tend to see people being pushed forward perhaps a little too early, before they're ready," Voss says. "There's not as much time for captains to create new captains by tapping a guy on the shoulder and telling him when he's out of line."

    ___

    Freed reported from Minneapolis.

    ___

    Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

    Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45834049/ns/travel/

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    Monday, January 2, 2012