Women in Lit


jtotheizzoe:

Let’s talk about the cosmos.
(from Jenny Chen’s Animated GIFs Of A Pop-Up Book For Adults at Co.Design)

jtotheizzoe:

Let’s talk about the cosmos.

(from Jenny Chen’s Animated GIFs Of A Pop-Up Book For Adults at Co.Design)

discoverynews:

Runts of Stellar Litter Rarer than ThoughtObservations by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer have revealed a surprise.
keep reading

discoverynews:

Runts of Stellar Litter Rarer than Thought

Observations by NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer have revealed a surprise.

keep reading

explore-blog:

Cantor Set omelet, and other scientific concepts rendered in food by Kevin Van Aelst.

explore-blog:

Cantor Set omelet, and other scientific concepts rendered in food by Kevin Van Aelst.

mothernaturenetwork:

Plastic is found in virtually everything these days. Your food and hygiene products are packaged in it. Your car, phone and computer are made from it. And you might even chew on it daily in the form of gum. While most plastics are touted as recyclable, the reality is that they’re “downcycled.” A plastic milk carton can never be recycled into another carton — it can be made into a lower-quality item like plastic lumber, which can’t be recycled.16 simple ways to reduce plastic waste

mothernaturenetwork:

Plastic is found in virtually everything these days. Your food and hygiene products are packaged in it. Your car, phone and computer are made from it. And you might even chew on it daily in the form of gum. While most plastics are touted as recyclable, the reality is that they’re “downcycled.” A plastic milk carton can never be recycled into another carton — it can be made into a lower-quality item like plastic lumber, which can’t be recycled.
16 simple ways to reduce plastic waste

ikenbot:

Couple Planets Couple Trees
The two brightest planets of the night sky, Venus (the brighter) and Jupiter, meet in the evening sky of Brittany, France.

ikenbot:

Couple Planets Couple Trees

The two brightest planets of the night sky, Venus (the brighter) and Jupiter, meet in the evening sky of Brittany, France.

Decision-making isn’t logical, it’s emotional, according to the latest findings in neuroscience. A few years ago, neuroscientist Antonio Damasio made a groundbreaking discovery. He studied people with damage in the part of the brain where emotions are generated. He found that they seemed normal, except that they were not able to feel emotions. But they all had something peculiar in common: they couldn’t make decisions. They could describe what they should be doing in logical terms, yet they found it very difficult to make even simple decisions, such as what to eat. Many decisions have pros and cons on both sides—shall I have the chicken or the turkey? With no rational way to decide, these test subjects were unable to arrive at a decision.

So at the point of decision, emotions are very important for choosing. In fact even with what we believe are logical decisions, the very point of choice is arguably always based on emotion.

contemplatingmadness:

Your DNA Changes as You Age

While our bodies age, scientists believe that our DNA at least remains constant. New research, however, reveals that, even though its sequence remains constant, subtle chemical changes occur to our DNA as we age—and it could explain why the risk of developing disease increases as we get older.
DNA is made up of four basic chemical building blocks, called adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine. It’s the sequences of those chemicals in a strand of DNA that determines what function a gene has, and one of the ways the resulting genes are controlled is a process called methylation. That just means that a methyl group — one carbon atom and three hydrogen atom—bonds to part of the DNA and subtly change its function.
New research, published in PNAS, however, shows that as we grow older our DNA’s susceptibility to methylation changes. A team of researchers from the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute in Barcelona, Spain, extracted DNA from white blood cells of twenty newborn babies and twenty people aged between 89 and 100 years old, then compared their respective degrees of methylation.
In a newborn baby 80.5 percent of cytosine nucleotides were methylated, while in centenarians that figure dropped to 73 percent. An intermediary example, taken from a 26-year-old male subject, exhibited 78 percent methylation. It’s not clear why it happens, but the researchers speculate that it could be due to extremely subtle age-related changes to the DNA.
But what the hell does it all mean? Well, taking a closer look at the samples, the researchers discovered that a third of the methylated groups which were in different positions in the elderly compared to the young are already known to be linked to cancer risk.
If you think about the DNA strand as “hardware” and the added methyl groups as “software”—which isn’t actually a bad analogy—you can think of the inappropriately placed methyl groups as software bugs that accumulate with age. It’s just that, for humans, those bugs leads to increased risk of terminal disease. Fortunately, these kinds of findings should help scientists troubleshoot our internal apps. [PNAS via Science]

contemplatingmadness:

Your DNA Changes as You Age

While our bodies age, scientists believe that our DNA at least remains constant. New research, however, reveals that, even though its sequence remains constant, subtle chemical changes occur to our DNA as we age—and it could explain why the risk of developing disease increases as we get older.

DNA is made up of four basic chemical building blocks, called adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine. It’s the sequences of those chemicals in a strand of DNA that determines what function a gene has, and one of the ways the resulting genes are controlled is a process called methylation. That just means that a methyl group — one carbon atom and three hydrogen atom—bonds to part of the DNA and subtly change its function.

New research, published in PNAS, however, shows that as we grow older our DNA’s susceptibility to methylation changes. A team of researchers from the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute in Barcelona, Spain, extracted DNA from white blood cells of twenty newborn babies and twenty people aged between 89 and 100 years old, then compared their respective degrees of methylation.

In a newborn baby 80.5 percent of cytosine nucleotides were methylated, while in centenarians that figure dropped to 73 percent. An intermediary example, taken from a 26-year-old male subject, exhibited 78 percent methylation. It’s not clear why it happens, but the researchers speculate that it could be due to extremely subtle age-related changes to the DNA.

But what the hell does it all mean? Well, taking a closer look at the samples, the researchers discovered that a third of the methylated groups which were in different positions in the elderly compared to the young are already known to be linked to cancer risk.

If you think about the DNA strand as “hardware” and the added methyl groups as “software”—which isn’t actually a bad analogy—you can think of the inappropriately placed methyl groups as software bugs that accumulate with age. It’s just that, for humans, those bugs leads to increased risk of terminal disease. Fortunately, these kinds of findings should help scientists troubleshoot our internal apps. [PNAS via Science]

fyeahuniverse:

Hawaiian Bobtail Squid; Euprymna scolopes

Bioluminescence can be a very helpful evolutionary feature for creatures who live in the deep ocean where sun-produced-light is scarce. The Hawaiian bobtail squid doesn’t bioluminesce itself, but rather it hosts colonies of bioluminescent Vibrio fischeri bacterium in a mutualistic relationship. 

Image via animalword

fyeahuniverse:

Hawaiian Bobtail Squid; Euprymna scolopes

Bioluminescence can be a very helpful evolutionary feature for creatures who live in the deep ocean where sun-produced-light is scarce. The Hawaiian bobtail squid doesn’t bioluminesce itself, but rather it hosts colonies of bioluminescent Vibrio fischeri bacterium in a mutualistic relationship.

Image via animalword

experimentsinmotion:

Water Weight: Effects of Surface Tension

(via Kuriositas)

bashford:

The installation ‘bios [bible]’ (2007) by Robotlab consists of an industrial robot which writes down the bible on rolls of paper.  The machine draws the calligraphic lines with high precision - like a monk in the scriptorium.

bashford:

The installation ‘bios [bible]’ (2007) by Robotlab consists of an industrial robot which writes down the bible on rolls of paper.  The machine draws the calligraphic lines with high precision - like a monk in the scriptorium.