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Saturday, April 7, 2012

BuzzFeed Latest: 15 People Who Like To Post Photos Of Themselves On Facebook and More!


Today’s Hottest Buzz

10 Incredible Pictures Of The Navy Jet That Crashed Into A Virginia Beach Apartment

A Navy fighter jet based in Virginia crashed a few miles from its base into an apartment building on Friday afternoon. Both pilots ejected to safety, and so far, no fatalities have been reported from people living in the apartments.

15 People Who Like To Post Photos Of Themselves On Facebook

Not just any photos, but the SAME photos. These Facebook users really enjoy variations on a theme.

Can Drastically Changing Your Face Give You An Identity Crisis?

Your face is a big part of your identity — so what happens when plastic surgery substantially changes that face? How a radical appearance overhaul can affect one's sense of self.

10 Animals With Dye Jobs

While Florida's ban of dyeing animals faces repeal, folks in lots of other states are coloring their pets for Easter — or just for fun. Below, some that run the gamut from cute to unsettling.

Half A Million Macs Infected By Trojan

Find out how to tell if yours is one of them. If I can perform this test without turning my MacBook into a really expensive door stop, anyone can.

Dubsteb Bunny Beagle

Let’s face it guys, you wont watch anything better today. Happy Easter!

How Evil Can You Be About Somebody's Total Lie Of A Profile Photo?

Plus, how to not be creepy on Twitter. Welcome to FWD: Halp! a weekly advice column about using technology like a person.

How To Take The Perfect Vertigo Photo

Dennis Maitland's 'Life on the Edge' photos are intensely beautiful, but also kind of make you want to throw up. Maitland explains how to take the perfect puke shot.

An Ad Flash Mob That's Actually Worth Seeing

Trust me. Because I despise ad flash mobs.

Amazing Dog Lifeguard Rescues Pup From Drowning

This video is too cute for words! Watch as a puppy has trouble getting out of the pool only to be saved by its parent.

More on BuzzFeed ›

FlowingData - Conducting Demystified

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FlowingData

Conducting Demystified

Apr 06, 2012 09:47 am  •  Permalink

Conducting demystified by NYT

The New York Times, in collaboration with the New York University Movement Lab, explains music conducting in this beautifully produced video. It's part interview with Alan Gilbert, music director of the New York Philharmonic, and part rendering of motion capture data, which represents Gilbert's conducting.

To capture the data, the Movement Lab installed high-speed motion capture cameras, and Gilbert put on one of those funny-looking suits with the sensor balls on them. He conducted, and they recorded his body and his hands.

Fantasia will probably come to mind as you watch, specifically towards the end when only conducting trails and sensor spots are left to dance on the screen.




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ScienceDaily: Living Well News

ScienceDaily: Living Well News


Psychological testing may predict success in soccer

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 06:29 AM PDT

Measuring what are known as executive functions, which reflect the cognitive ability to deal with sudden problems, may make it possible to predict how good an elite soccer player will become in the future. Scientists believe that they have finally found the scientific key to what has previously been described as "game intelligence" in successful soccer players.

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News

ScienceDaily: Top Environment News


Which plants will survive droughts, climate change?

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 11:18 AM PDT

Biologists aim to predict which plant species will escape extinction from climate change. Droughts are worsening around the world, which poses a great challenge to plants in gardens and forests. Scientists have debated for more than a century how to predict which species are most vulnerable.

Impact of warming climate doesn't always translate to streamflow

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 11:17 AM PDT

An analysis of 35 headwater basins in the United States and Canada found that the impact of warmer air temperatures on streamflow rates was less than expected in many locations, suggesting that some ecosystems may be resilient to certain aspects of climate change.

Ecosystems dependent on snowy winters most threatened, long term research confirms

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 05:28 AM PDT

As global temperatures rise, the most threatened ecosystems are those that depend on a season of snow and ice, scientists say. In semi-arid regions like the southwestern United States, mountain snowpacks are the dominant source of water for human consumption and irrigation. New research shows that as average temperatures increase in these snowy ecosystems, a significant amount of stream water is lost to the atmosphere.

Study shows unified process of evolution in bacteria and sexual eukaryotes

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 11:21 AM PDT

Bacteria adapt to habitats through random genetic mutations and gene exchange. But how does an advantageous mutation spread from a bacterium to a population? Does the gene sweep through a population or does an individual bacterium obtain the gene, then replicate its genome to form an adapted population? Researchers have shown that genes can sweep through populations, indicating that the process of evolution in bacteria is very similar to that of sexual eukaryotes.

How to make high-end perfumes without whale barf

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 04:53 AM PDT

Researchers have identified a gene in balsam fir trees that could facilitate cheaper and more sustainable production of plant-based fixatives and scents used in the fragrance industry and reduce the need for ambergris, a substance harvested from whale barf.

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News

ScienceDaily: Most Popular News


Which plants will survive droughts, climate change?

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 11:18 AM PDT

Biologists aim to predict which plant species will escape extinction from climate change. Droughts are worsening around the world, which poses a great challenge to plants in gardens and forests. Scientists have debated for more than a century how to predict which species are most vulnerable.

Impact of warming climate doesn't always translate to streamflow

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 11:17 AM PDT

An analysis of 35 headwater basins in the United States and Canada found that the impact of warmer air temperatures on streamflow rates was less than expected in many locations, suggesting that some ecosystems may be resilient to certain aspects of climate change.

Coordinating the circadian clock: Molecular pair controls time-keeping and fat metabolism

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 11:17 AM PDT

Disruption in circadian rhythms leads to increased incidence of many diseases, including cancer. Each cell of the body has its own internal timing mechanism. A clock protein, called Rev-erb alpha, was thought to have a subordinate role because the clock runs fairly normally in its absence. New work has found that a closely related protein called Rev-erb beta serves as a back-up. When both are not functioning, the cellular clock loses its time-keeping function.

12-mile-high Martian dust devil caught in act

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 07:57 AM PDT

A Martian dust devil roughly 12 miles high (20 kilometers) was captured whirling its way along the Amazonis Planitia region of Northern Mars on March 14. It was imaged by the High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment (HiRISE) camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. Despite its height, the plume is little more than three-quarters of a football field wide (70 yards, or 70 meters).

Ecosystems dependent on snowy winters most threatened, long term research confirms

Posted: 06 Apr 2012 05:28 AM PDT

As global temperatures rise, the most threatened ecosystems are those that depend on a season of snow and ice, scientists say. In semi-arid regions like the southwestern United States, mountain snowpacks are the dominant source of water for human consumption and irrigation. New research shows that as average temperatures increase in these snowy ecosystems, a significant amount of stream water is lost to the atmosphere.

Women cannot rewind the 'biological clock'

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 07:47 PM PDT

Many women do not fully appreciate the consequences of delaying motherhood, and expect that assisted reproductive technologies can reverse their aged ovarian function, researchers have reported.

Food ingredients most prone to fraudulent economically motivated adulteration

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 11:42 AM PDT

The top seven adulterated ingredients in a food database are olive oil, milk, honey, saffron, orange juice, coffee and apple juice.

Novel method used to combat malaria drug resistance

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 11:42 AM PDT

Researchers have developed a "gene chip" to contribute to the identification of malaria drug resistance, an effort that will allow for real-time response in modified treatment strategies for this devastating disease.

Recovery from propofol anesthesia may be sped up by use of common stimulant

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 11:42 AM PDT

The ability of the commonly used stimulant methylphenidate (Ritalin) to speed recovery from general anesthesia appears to apply both to the inhaled gas isoflurane, as previously reported, and to the intravenous drug propofol.

Study shows unified process of evolution in bacteria and sexual eukaryotes

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 11:21 AM PDT

Bacteria adapt to habitats through random genetic mutations and gene exchange. But how does an advantageous mutation spread from a bacterium to a population? Does the gene sweep through a population or does an individual bacterium obtain the gene, then replicate its genome to form an adapted population? Researchers have shown that genes can sweep through populations, indicating that the process of evolution in bacteria is very similar to that of sexual eukaryotes.

Purified lung and thyroid progenitors derived from embryonic stem cells

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 10:16 AM PDT

Researchers have derived a population of pure lung and thyroid progenitor cells in vitro that successfully mimic the developmental milestones of lung and thyroid tissue formation.

Tiny hitchhikers attack cancer cells: Gold nanostars first to deliver drug directly to cancer cell nucleus

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 10:15 AM PDT

Nanotechnology offers powerful new possibilities for targeted cancer therapies, but the design challenges are many. Scientists have now developed a nanoparticle that can deliver a drug directly to a cancer cell's nucleus. They have also directly imaged nanoscale dimensions showing how nanoparticles interact with the nucleus, which dramatically changes shape. The researchers found this shape change linked to cells dying and the cell population becoming less viable.

Shifting sands: New model predicts how sand and other granular materials flow

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 10:15 AM PDT

Sand in an hourglass might seem simple and straightforward, but such granular materials are actually tricky to model. From far away, flowing sand resembles a liquid, streaming down the center of an hourglass like water from a faucet. But up close, one can make out individual grains that slide against each other, forming a mound at the base that holds its shape, much like a solid.

How embryonic stem cells orchestrate human development

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 10:14 AM PDT

Researchers show in detail how three genes within human embryonic stem cells regulate development, a finding that increases understanding of how to grow these cells for therapeutic purposes.

Psychological testing may predict success in soccer

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 06:29 AM PDT

Measuring what are known as executive functions, which reflect the cognitive ability to deal with sudden problems, may make it possible to predict how good an elite soccer player will become in the future. Scientists believe that they have finally found the scientific key to what has previously been described as "game intelligence" in successful soccer players.

How to make high-end perfumes without whale barf

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 04:53 AM PDT

Researchers have identified a gene in balsam fir trees that could facilitate cheaper and more sustainable production of plant-based fixatives and scents used in the fragrance industry and reduce the need for ambergris, a substance harvested from whale barf.

Microflora have decisive role with autoimmune illnesses, some good, some bad

Posted: 05 Apr 2012 04:52 AM PDT

When the right microorganisms are at work, immune cells involved in the development of autoimmune illnesses like psoriasis, multiple sclerosis and arthritis, can develop anti-inflammatory properties. Scientists have now demonstrated that particular fungi activate the immune cells involved in the development of certain illnesses, whereas other microorganisms, in particular bacteria that are found naturally on our skin, lend an anti-inflammatory function to them.

Possible clues found to why HIV vaccine showed modest protection

Posted: 04 Apr 2012 06:00 PM PDT

Insights into how the first vaccine ever reported to modestly prevent HIV infection in people might have worked were recently published.

First targeted nanomedicine to enter human clinical studies

Posted: 04 Apr 2012 11:43 AM PDT

Scientists have found promising effects of a first-in-class targeted cancer drug called BIND-014 in treating solid tumors.

Treatment hope for muscular dystrophy

Posted: 04 Apr 2012 10:37 AM PDT

Medical researchers have found that increasing a specific protein in muscles could help treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a severe and progressive muscle wasting disease that affects young boys.