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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: web  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


Los Angeles Times
Judge may shutter Web site selling Olympics tix
ESPN -
AP SAN FRANCISCO -- The US Olympic Committee asked a federal judge for the second time Monday to shut down a Web site it alleges is fraudulently selling ...
AssociatedPress
Boulder lawyer launches Web site for Olympic scam victims Daily Camera
USOC pushes for shut down of phony Olympics ticket Web site WZTV
Los Angeles Times - CNN
all 125 news articles »
Expanded AccessMyHealth.org Web Site Features Surveys and ...
MarketWatch -
The AccessMyHealth.org Web site and surveys are part of a broader effort of the HCA to develop a strategy for adoption and use of online personalized health ...

TechCrunch
Mozilla leads push to reimagine Web browsers
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA -
(08-04) 19:05 PDT -- Mozilla, the group that oversees scores of volunteer programmers collaborating on the free Firefox Web browser, hopes to attract more ...
Adaptive Path Releases Aurora To ?Inspire And Engage? Community TechCrunch
all 3 news articles »
'ENTERTAINMENT TONIGHT' and MSN Unite in Web Content Deal
MarketWatch -
"Pairing ET, the #1 source for celebrity news on TV, with MSN, a top online Web destination, will create a one-stop source for celebrity and entertainment ...
'ET', MSN Ink Deal Broadcasting & Cable
all 16 news articles »
Web Developer II 30490
Seattle Times, United States -
Will be Developing/enhancing web site. Developing Windows Application in c#. skills that are required for this position are C# and web development in the ...
TrueSight Edge First To Provide End-user Monitoring for Akamai ... MarketWatch
all 11 news articles »  AKAM
Web Filtering Moves to the Cloud
New York Times, United States -
Web filtering software is moving to the cloud ? that all-knowing, pervasive, sometimes unreliable cluster of computers in the digital ether ? and it?s going ...
Zscaler Defines a New Standard for In-the-Cloud Security MarketWatch
Internet security moves to the cloud NetworkWorld.com
Zscaler Offers Security Services in the Cloud NewsFactor Network
bMighty.com
all 22 news articles »

VNUNet.com
Dell Seeks, May Receive 'Cloud Computing' Trademark
InformationWeek, NY -
By J. Nicholas Hoover Like the term Web 2.0, "cloud computing" is quickly becoming a meme without borders. And like the old one, the new phrase with the ...
Dell's Trademark for 'Cloud Computing' Raise Ire InternetNews.com
Dell seeks control of clouds VNUNet.com
Dell tries to trademark "cloud computing" Pocket-lint.co.uk
Washington Post - Computerworld
all 57 news articles »  DELL
Montauk Monster burning up the Web
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN -
The so-called ?Montauk Monster? is burning up the Web. On CNN?s site, the creature copped the no. 1 story spot Monday (beating out ?Racy Photos of Toddler?s ...
Busted for a Web addiction
Houston Chronicle, United States -
My name is Ken ... and I'm a World Wide Web junkie. I wanted to see how bad I had the Internet jones, so I looked for a test on ... here we go, the Internet ...
Web chips away at China's grip on information
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA -
Blogs, forums, social networking, video sharing and other community-oriented sites - known as Web 2.0 - depend on users expressing their opinions. ...
China monitoring video Web sites more closely San Francisco Chronicle
all 3 news articles »
Source: Google News

[BOOK] The Souls of Black Folk -
WEB Du Bois - 2003 - books.google.com
... THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK WEB Du Bois Introduction and Notes by Farah [asinine Griffin
Page 2. ... " (page 146) Page 5. WEB DU BOIS THE SOULS OF BLACK FOLK ...

Measuring the Independence of Central Banks and Its Effect on Policy Outcomes -
A Cukierman, SB Web, B Neyapti - The World Bank Economic Review, 1992 - World Bank
Page 1. THE WORLD BANK ECONOMIC REVIEW. VOL. 6. NO. 1: 35J-J9J Measuring the
Independence of Central Banks and Its Effect on Policy Outcomes ...

Crystal structure of the activated insulin receptor tyrosine kinase in complex with peptide … -
W Focuses, NPG Contact - The EMBO Journal, 1997 - nature.com
The EMBO Journal (1997) 16, 5572?5581, doi: 10.1093/emboj/16.18.5572. Crystal
structure of the activated insulin receptor tyrosine ...

[PDF] The World-Wide Web -
T Berners-Lee, R Cailliau, A Luotonen, HF Nielsen, … - Communications of the ACM, 1994 - computertextbook.com
... What is the World Wide Web? The World Wide Web is the total collection of Web
pages that are stored on Web servers located all over the world. ...
-

[PDF] The diameter of the world wide web -
R Albert, H Jeong, AL Barabasi - Arxiv preprint cond-mat/9907038, 1999 - arxiv.org
arXiv:cond-mat/9907038 v2 10 Sep 1999 The diameter of the world wide web Despite
its increasing role in communication, the world wide web (www) remains the ...

Clonal expansion of p 53 mutant cells is associated with brain tumour progression -
D Sidransky, T Mikkelsen, K Schwechheimer, ML … - Nature, 1992 - nature.com
... David Sidransky * , Tom Mikkelsen ? , Karl Schwechheimer ? , Mark L.
Rosenblum ? , Web Cavanee ? & Bert Vogelstein *. * The ...

[PDF] The semantic Web -
T Berners-Lee, J Hendler, O Lassila - Scientific American, 2001 - www-personal.si.umich.edu
... May 17, 2001 The Semantic Web A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers
will unleash a revolution of new possibilities ... Web: A Research Agenda ...
-

All in the family? New insights and questions regarding interconnectivity of Ras, Rap1 and Ral -
W Focuses, NPG Contact - The EMBO Journal, 1998 - nature.com
The EMBO Journal (1998) 17, 6776?6782, doi:10.1093/emboj/17.23.6776. All in the
family? New insights and questions regarding interconnectivity ...

The anatomy of a large-scale hypertextual Web search engine -
S Brin, L Page - Computer Networks and ISDN Systems, 1998 - Elsevier
... The anatomy of a large-scale hypertextual Web search engine ? ... Keywords: World Wide
Web; Search engines; Information retrieval; PageRank: Google ...

[CITATION] The Souls ofBlack Folk
WEB Du Bois - Three Negro Classics, 1903

Source: Google Scholar
 

Brain’s White Matter: More “Talkative” than Once Thought

Johns Hopkins scientists have discovered to their surprise that nerves in the mammalian brain’s white matter do more than just ferry information between different brain regions, but in fact process information the way gray matter cells do.

The discovery in mouse cells, outlined in the cover story of the March issue of Nature Neuroscience, shows that brain cells “talk” with each other in more ways than previously thought.

“We were surprised to see these nerve axons talking to other cells in the white matter,” says Dwight Bergles, Ph.D., an associate professor of neuroscience at Hopkins.

The discovery focuses on oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), whose main role when they mature into oligodendrocytes is to wrap themselves around and insulate nerves with a whitish coat of protective myelin. The immature cells simply hang around and divide very slowly, waiting to be spurred into action.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

To learn more about OPCs that reside in the brain’s white matter, the Johns Hopkins researchers measured activity from individual precursor cells in the corpus callosum, a region of white matter that connects the two brain hemispheres. To their surprise, OPCs were found to have electrical signals produced by the neurotransmitter glutamate, similar to the signals used as the principle means of cell-to-cell communication and information processing in the gray matter. The phenomenon was unlikely, they said, because in the mouse brain, OPCs in the myelin-rich white matter are far from synapses, the points of contact between nerves where glutamate is released.

Theorizing that OPCs might have experienced glutamate in some less obvious way in this area of the brain, Bergles and his team studied nearby nerve cells to figure out where the glutamate might be coming from.

By forcing single nerve cells to become excited one at a time, they discovered that as electrical impulses are carried along the nerves, glutamate is released and causes electrical signals in the OPCs. A further microscopic hunt revealed that pools of glutamate were present in the nerve fibers wherever they touched OPCs. All of the nerve cells in the white matter that released glutamate within reach of OPCs, moreover, had something in common: no myelin insulation.

Normally myelin speeds electrical impulses. Cells lacking the coating fire 20 to 90 times slower than cells coated with myelin. Myelin loss is well known to impair signaling and information processing, causing nerve cells to die and creating such neurodegenerative conditions as multiple sclerosis.

Bergles speculates that this white matter activity his team discovered may help “naked” nerve cells signal nearby OPCs and say “cover me with myelin because we need to replace another cell that has been damaged.”

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Health, the March of Dimes, NARSAD, the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the Medical Scientist Training Program.

Authors on the paper are Jennifer Ziskin and Bergles of Hopkins, Akiko Nishiyama and Maria Rubio of the University of Connecticut, and Masahiro Fukaya of Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan.

On the Web:
http://www.bergleslab.com/
http://www.Nature.com/neuro

 

How Aging Changes the Brain

Why do we experience changes in our mental abilities as we age? What happens in our brains to cause these changes? And what can we do to keep our minds sharp?

Until recently, scientists could only offer educated guesses about the answer to these questions. Now, however, thanks to sophisticated new brain-imaging technology, they can start to put the pieces of the puzzle together.

In this section we'll learn how aging changes our brains, how aging affects memory, and what you can do to keep your memory sharp.

Some of the most important information scientists have learned about our brains appears below. These concepts—based on animal experiments and human brain-imaging studies—represent what we know today about the effects of aging on our brains.

Understanding how and why brain functions change as we grow older may lead to new therapies and medications that could slow, stop, or prevent these processes altogether.

Of course, other health problems—like high blood pressure, diabetes, or deafness—that people either have or develop as they grow older profoundly affect how their brains change with time.

Specific changes vary greatly from one person to the next, and may include the following, depending on their medical and psychological history:

  • Brain mass shrinks
  • Outer surface thins
  • White matter decreases
  • Chemical messengers decrease

Brain mass shrinks: Beginning in our 60s or 70s, some people's overall brain mass may shrink a bit. Certain brain areas shrink more than others, including the frontal lobe (important for mental abilities) and the hippocampus (where new memories are formed).

Outer surface thins: The cortex—the heavily ridged outer surface of the brain—thins slightly with age. This thinning is not, as scientists once believed, the result of widespread loss of brain cells. Instead, the thinning of the brain's outer surface is likely due to a decrease in synaptic connections (a process that starts when we're about 20 years old). Synapses are like intersections. They allow brain cells to communicate with one another and to form connections.

White matter decreases: Many studies have linked aging with decreases in the brain's white matter (so called because it's made up, in part, of myelin—a fatty, white substance). Myelin helps to improve communication between brain cells.

Research shows that changes in white matter are linked with changes in speed of cognitive processing. Cognitive processing includes memory, attention, action, problem solving, and decision-making abilities.

It's important to remember, though, that aging is not a process of decline. Many of our gifts and abilities—including wisdom and problem solving—improve as we age.

Chemical messengers decrease: As our brains age, they generate fewer neurotransmitters (chemicals like serotonin, which carry messages between brain cells), and have fewer receptors that lock onto these messengers. This change may have an effect on memory.

 
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