Test your
eyesight: Whom do you see, Albert Einstein or Marilyn Monroe?
Want to check your eyesight? There is
an easy test for that in the form of this optical illusion.
If you have a decent eyesight, you
should be seeing Albert Einstein in the picture. Your eyesight is awesome if
you can continue to see Albert Einstein even from a decent distance.
Trouble is awaiting you in case you see
Hollywood actress Marilyn Monroe. That means you need to get your eyes checked.
This
optical illusion was created by neuroscientist Dr. Audee Olivia at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This hybrid image combines low spatial
components of a photo of Marilyn Monroe and high spatial frequency components
of an image of Albert Einstein. In a recent video, AsapScience highlighted the
process behind the trick.
Source:
www.zeenews.india.com
07.04.2015
Little voices inside your head
telling you to 'eat or stop' aren't just voices: Study
Washington: A new study has revealed
that the voices inside people's head that tells them to eat or stop eating are
actually a cluster of about 10,000 specialized brain cells.
The international team of scientists
has found tiny triggers inside those cells that give rise to this
"voice," and keep it speaking throughout life.
The new research, done in fish and
mice, can't yet be applied to humans who eat too much or too little. But it
revealed how tiny bits of DNA can have a big influence on how the
body regulates appetite and weight. It's the first documentation of exactly how
a brain cell gene involved in weight regulation was controlled. The team
reports their discoveries on genetic factors key to the brain cells, or
neurons, called POMC cells.
Located deep inside the brain, in a
structure called the hypothalamus, the cluster of POMC neurons act as a control
center for feelings of fullness or hunger. They take in signals from the body,
and send out chemical signals to regulate appetite and eating.
When POMC neurons are absent, or not
working correctly, animals and humans grow dangerously obese. Now, the new
findings show in animals that the same thing happens when certain genetic
triggers inside the POMC cells aren't working.
The researchers were also able to show
the importance of Islet 1 in zebrafish, which also fail to develop
POMC neurons when the transcription factor was blocked early in
development. Since zebrafish use different gene enhancers to regulate the
reading of the Pomc gene, this shows the true importance of Islet 1 by itself.
So far, genome-wide studies of humans
have not shown any relationship between obesity and changes in the Isl1
gene. Brain imaging that tracks the binding of signals to and from
POMC cells could reveal further clues. And in theory, it could be possible to
find drugs to increase the production of Pomc gene products, or to grow
replacement cells for malfunctioning POMC cells.
The paper is published in PLoS Genetics.
Source:
www.zeenews.india.com
07.04.2015
No amount of guilt can change the past, and no amount of worrying can
change the future
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