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Yoga Anatomy-2nd Edition: Leslie Kaminoff, Amy Matthews …

Leslie Kaminoff is a yoga educator inspired by the tradition of T.K.V. Desikachar, one of the world's foremost authorities on the therapeutic uses of yoga. Leslie is the founder of The Breathing Project, a New York City educational nonprofit organization dedicated to the teaching of individualized breath-centered yoga.

An internationally recognized specialist with over 32 years experience in the fields of yoga and breath anatomy, Kaminoff has led workshops for many of the leading yoga associations, schools, and training programs in the United States. He has also helped to organize international yoga conferences and has actively participated in the ongoing national debate regarding certification standards for yoga teachers and therapists.

Kaminoff has been a featured yoga expert in publications such as Yoga Journal and The New York Times, as well as online at WebMD, FoxNews Online, and Health.com. He is the founder of the highly respected international yoga blog eSutra, coauthor of the best-selling first edition of Yoga Anatomy, and creator of the DVD Breath-Centered Yoga with Leslie Kaminoff and the highly successful online course yogaanatomy.net. He resides in New York City and Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

Amy Matthews has been teaching movement since 1994. She is a certified Laban movement analyst, a BodyMind Centering teacher, and an infant developmental movement educator. She is registered with ISMETA (International Somatic Movement Education and Therapy Association) as a somatic movement therapist and educator, and with IAYT (International Association of Yoga Therapists).

Matthews coteaches the BodyMind Centering and yoga programs in California and New York City for the School for Body-Mind Centering. She was on the faculty of the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies for 10 years. Together, Matthews and Kaminoff lead The Breathing Project's advanced studies program for movement professionals committed to extending their professional skills and knowledge.

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Yoga Anatomy-2nd Edition: Leslie Kaminoff, Amy Matthews ...

Introduction to Biochemistry HD – YouTube

This is a new high definition (HD) dramatic video choreographed to powerful music that introduces the viewer/student to Biochemistry. It is designed as a motivational "trailer" to be shown by teachers in Biology, Biochemistry and Chemistry classrooms in middle school, high school and college as a visual Introduction to the wonders of the Biochemistry of life. It replaces an earlier video on the same topic that I produced over 3 years ago. Subscribe to my channel at http://www.youtube.com/user/sfgregs?f... to see all of my exciting video trailers in Biology, Chemistry, Earth Science, Astronomy and Physics. I will be releasing new ones periodically.

Music is a mix of "One Day" by Hans Zimmer, and "Your Destiny" by West One Music.

Please rate this video and feel free to comment. If you like it, please help me spread the word by posting links to it on your school and social media websites. The more students who can enjoy these dramatic videos, the better!

I wish to thank all the quality video and music producers whose postings enabled me to assemble this video for educational use.

To best enjoy this video, view on a big screen and turn up your speakers. The music is powerful and dramatic!

I can customize this video to add your name or school name at the end credits, for a very modest fee. If interested, email me at "fsgregs@comcast.net".

Until recently, you were able to download my videos for free from my other video storage site (vimeo.com). Recently, however, they began charging a significant membership fee to enable that feature, so downloading from there is no longer available. However, you can search for and obtain free download addons for your browser that will allow you to download my videos from either YouTube or Vimeo.

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Introduction to Biochemistry HD - YouTube

Immunology – University of California, San Diego

Faculty Contacts:John Chang&Shane Crotty

The Immunology Training Area is a unique joint effort between several departments at UC San Diego and LJI: the Department of Medicine, Pathology, Biological Sciences, and the La Jolla Institute for Allergy and Immunology. The overall goal of this training area is to provide students with exceptional and rigorous training in molecular and cellular immunology. The study of the immune system uses molecular, genetic, biochemical, and developmental approaches to understand the biomedically important issues of immunity, autoimmunity, allergy, immunodeficiency, transplantation, and cancer. Moreover, studies focusing on human disease pathogenesis often lead to insight into the fundamental mechanisms by which the immune response is regulated. Many faculty research programs now bridge the disciplines of Microbiology and Immunology to probe the specific interactions between microbial virulence factors and host innate and adaptive immune defenses. In this fashion, we gain a better understanding of the fundamental pathogenesis of infectious diseases and further development of vaccines and other immunotherapies.

Immunology faculty associated with the training area study a diverse range of topics, from fundamental mechanisms of B and T lymphocyte development and differentiation; basic mechanisms of innate immune defense involving dendritic cells, macrophages, and neutrophils; immunity against microbial pathogens as well as tumors; mucosal immunity; autoimmune disease, including diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and the inflammatory bowel disease; and hematopoietic stem cell and organ transplantation. A guiding principle throughout their research is the use of cutting-edge technology and multi-disciplinary approaches to fundamentally address major human health issues.

The training area is tightly integrated with several other training initiatives on campus. The multidisciplinary qBio Ph.D. specializationis open to all graduate students in the BMS program. The UC San Diego Center for Microbiome Innovation promotes training at the cutting-edge of microbiome research, biomedical engineering, and quantitative measurements and modeling.

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Immunology - University of California, San Diego

Biochemistry | Department of Biological Sciences | University …

Jns Jacob Berzelius, in the preface (addressed to Gustav IV Adolf) to the first Swedish edition of Animal Chemistry, 1806, said: "Of all the sciences contributing to medicine, chemistry is the primary one, and, apart from the general light it throws on the entire art of healing, it will soon bestow on some of its branches a perfection such as one never could have anticipated." To this day, Biochemistry provides the interface between the living and non-living worlds.The goals of the Biochemistry research faculty in the Department of Biological Sciences are to understand the molecular mechanisms underlying biological processes, and o examine the relationships between structure and function in biological macromolecules. Our interests include the mechanisms of action of both protein and RNA catalysts, and our studies require state-of-the-art methods ranging from X-ray crystallography, steady-state and single turnover kinetics, protein and nucleic acid purification and analysis, and mathematical modeling.

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Biochemistry | Department of Biological Sciences | University ...

Anatomy: What is it and why is it important?

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Anatomy: What is it and why is it important?

Amazon.com: Science And Human Behavior (9780029290408): B …

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ISBN-13: 978-0029290408

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Sexual Behavior in the Human Male: Alfred C. Kinsey …

These three reprinted books contain most of the published statistical data taken from the original interview schedules used by Alfred Kinsey and his colleagues from 1938 to 1963 to gather sexual histories. Except for two topically focused books published by other authors after Kinsey's death, the ideas and data in these books represent the bulk of Kinsey's intellectual and empirical contribution to sex research. It is appropriate that they be reprinted in 1998, the 50th anniversary of the original publication of Sexual Behavior in the Human Male. It was with this first book that knowledge about sexuality garnered from a scientific survey burst into the consciousness of the American public. This book and its companion, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, published in 1953, introduced a new way of thinking and talking about sexuality to American (and world) culture.

The practice of sexuality was quite varied in the United States before the publication of these books, but it was largely unrecorded, at least by scientists. Before the late 1940s, the sexual lives of most people were shaped by personal experiments, isolated sexual encounters, uninformed gossip, media sensation, and moral condemnation (not necessarily in that order). The national myth was that most people were obedient to a traditional set of sexual rules and those who were not were relatively rare and defective in morals or willpower.

It was against this background of repression and prurience that Kinsey asserted the right of science to speak about sexual behavior. As a scientist, Kinsey spoke and wrote plainly, using language about sexuality that was rarely heard or read at the time. The facts reported in the book on men's sexual behavior were at fundamental variance with the myths. Kinsey reported that the practice of masturbation was nearly universal among men (90 percent did it), that homosexual relations were widely experienced (37 percent had done it once), that premarital sexual relations were common (most college men did it), that half of married men had had extramarital sexual relations, and that oral sex was routine in deed if not in public discourse (70 percent of educated husbands said they and their wives had done it).

But it was not only these facts that evoked a powerful negative response from traditional figures in churches, legislatures, and the press. The book also had a strong reformist tone, with Kinsey arguing, completely in the American grain, that progress in dealing with sexual problems could only be made by objectively uncovering the facts of sexual life. That the reported sexual practices of American men differed from moral expectations was (in Kinsey's interpretation) evidence of the power of sexuality and not a mark of moral decay. The problems associated with sexuality were a consequence of social repression, not inherent to sexuality itself.

The controversy engendered by this first book caused Kinsey's second book, Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, to be eagerly anticipated by his critics, his defenders, the media, and the public. Its publication in 1953 was met with an equal if not greater storm than the publication of the book on men. Kinsey's evidence suggested that women were less behaviorally active than men in all aspects of sexual life but that they were still more sexual than traditional views allowed. However, the focus of the media on the statistical findings about sexual practices among women (what we now treat as "factoids") made the second book appear entirely similar to the first (by this time both books had become fused in the public mind and in the media as the "Kinsey Reports").

Contrary to this view, it is evident from a careful reading of the book on women that Kinsey had moved from his thinking in the book on men to a more nuanced view of sexuality. The book on men is severely masculinist in its perspective, using men's sexual lives as the primary model for what is considered to be sexually normal. The sexuality of the human male was characterized by novelty in practices, variety in partners, a quick and urgent response to sexual stimuli, and a search for orgasm as the primary source of sexual pleasure. Sexual Behavior in the Human Female, based on approximately 6000 interviews, is a retreat, at least in part, from all of these assumptions. Two important changes in Kinsey's thinking are apparent: women and men are more alike in the biology of their sexuality than he had previously thought, and women's sexuality and, on suitable reflection, men's sexuality seemed shaped, not merely repressed, by social and cultural forces. Increasingly, it was clear that the two books were works of social science, not biology.

The negative reaction to Kinsey and his works in the 1950s frightened off providers of funding and researchers in the field of sex research. As a consequence, the Kinsey studies were used as flawed report cards on sexual life in the United States well into the era of AIDS. The studies were particularly deficient in their sampling methods, and it was obvious to researchers at the time that they did not accurately measure the sexual life of American women and men. As science, they were important first steps but incomplete in scope and method. The findings were limited to white, better educated, less religious, and largely youthful women and men from the northeastern United States who volunteered to be interviewed about their sexual lives. We now know that the effect of volunteer respondents was to inflate the reported levels of some aspects of sexual behavior. The interview schedule and the interviewing were of high quality, but they could not correct for biases in sampling.

A proper historical understanding of Kinsey's purposes should focus on his explicit desire to understand sexuality by using objective tools of science and on his scarcely concealed desire to reform what he saw as the repressive character of sexual life in the United States during the period before the Second World War. This goal of sexual reform was scarcely unique to Kinsey -- only his scientific methods and the connection he made between science and sexual reform were special. The findings from Kinsey's work and the attitudes the work expressed quickly filtered into reformist groups that strove to change laws about sexual behavior, to free public speech about sexuality, to advance family planning through birth control, to promote sex education, and to reduce what they saw as hypocrisy about sexuality in American culture.

The association of Kinsey with sexual reform has recently made him the target, both as a scientist and a man, of attacks by conservative groups. John Bancroft, the current director of the institute that Kinsey founded, has written a spirited and important defense of Kinsey in the introduction to the reprinted edition of Sexual Behavior in the Human Female.

The third reprinted book is quite different from the other two, but it emphasizes the continuing utility to historians of the entire collection of Kinsey's interviews. This book presents the marginal tabulations of all of the interviews gathered by Kinsey and his colleagues (including those conducted after Kinsey's death in 1956) and makes them more useful by excluding certain groups that surely skewed the findings of the original report on men. Funding from the National Institute of Mental Health in the early 1960s presented an opportunity for all the 17,500 original interviews to be placed on computer tape. Of these interviews, 14,000 are treated as a "basic" sample of persons who were noncriminal; those of persons with criminal histories are treated separately. In addition, a separate sample of persons with extensive homosexual histories was selected from both the criminal and basic samples.

Kinsey and his works are now part of the story of the "American Century." Sensitive use of the archived interviews by historians as well as Kinsey's own life and views may offer us further insight into the sexual aspects of that story and the ways in which our sexual past has shaped our sexual present.

Reviewed by John Gagnon, Ph.D.

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Sexual Behavior in the Human Male: Alfred C. Kinsey ...

Portal:Neuroscience – Wikipedia

Major depressive disorder (also known as clinical depression, major depression, unipolar depression, or unipolar disorder) is a mental disorder typically characterized by a pervasive low mood, low self-esteem, and loss of interest or pleasure in usual activities. The term was selected by the American Psychiatric Association for the 1980 version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III) classification for the symptom cluster, and has become widely used since. The general term depression is often used to describe the disorder, but since it is also used to describe temporary sadness or a depressed mood, more precise terminology is preferred in clinical use and research. Major depression is an often disabling condition which adversely affects a person's family, work or school life, sleeping and eating habits, and general health. In the United States around 3.4% of people with major depression commit suicide, and up to 60% of all people who commit suicide have depression or another mood disorder.

The diagnosis of major depressive disorder is based on the patient's self-reported experiences, behavior reported by relatives or friends, and mental state. There is no laboratory test for major depression, although physicians generally request tests for physical conditions that may cause similar symptoms. The most common time of onset is between the ages of 30 and 40 years, with a later peak between 50 and 60 years. Major depression occurs about twice as frequently in women as in men, although men are at higher risk for suicide.

Most patients are treated in the community with antidepressant medication and supportive counseling, and some with psychotherapy. Admission to hospital may be necessary in cases associated with self-neglect or a significant risk of harm to self or others. A minority with severe illness may be treated with electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), under a short-acting general anaesthetic. The course of the disorder varies widely, from a once-only occurrence lasting months to a lifelong disorder with recurrent major depressive episodes. Depressed individuals have a shorter life expectancy than those without depression, being more susceptible to medical conditions such as heart disease. Sufferers and former patients may be stigmatized.

The understanding of the nature and causes of depression has evolved over the centuries; nevertheless, many aspects of depression are still not fully understood, and are the subject of debate and research. Psychological, psycho-social, evolutionary and biological causes have been proposed. Psychological treatments are based on theories about personality, interpersonal communication, and unduly negative thoughts. The monoamine chemicals serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine are naturally present in the brain and assist communication between nerve cells. Monoamines have been implicated in depression, and most antidepressants work to increase the active levels of at least one.

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Portal:Neuroscience - Wikipedia

Understanding genetic architecture of different traits and …

ByRobin Scullin

Scientists at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health have developed a powerful method for characterizing patterns of genetic contributions to different traits such as height, BMI, and childhood IQ, as well as diseases including Alzheimer's disease, diabetes, heart disease, and bipolar disorder. The new method provides a "big picture" of genetic influences that should be particularly helpful in designing future genetic studies and understanding genetic risk prediction.

In a study published today in the journal Nature Genetics, the scientists mined existing data from genetic studies and used novel statistical techniques to obtain estimates of the numbers of DNA variations that contribute to different physical traits and diseases,

"In terms of practical results, we can now use this method to estimate, for any trait or disease, the number of individuals we need to sample in future studies to identify the majority of the important genetic contributions," says study senior author Nilanjan Chatterjee, a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor in the Department of Biostatistics.

Bloomberg Distinguished Professor in Department of Biostatistics

Affordable DNA-sequencing technology became available around the turn of the millennium. With it, researchers have performed hundreds of genome-wide association studies to discover DNA variations that are linked to different diseases or traits. These variationscalled single nucleotide polymorphisms, or SNPsare changes in DNA "letters" at various sites on the genome. Knowing which variations are linked to a disease or trait can be useful in gaining biological understanding about how diseases and other traits originate and further progress.

There is also interest in using genetic markers to develop risk-scores that could identify individuals at high or low risk for diseases and then use the information to develop a "precision medicine" approach to disease prevention.

"Depending on their sample sizes, previous genome-wide association studies have uncovered a few SNPs or many for any given disease or trait," Chatterjee says. "But what they generally haven't done is reveal the overall genetic architectures of diseases or traitsin other words, the likely number of SNPs that contribute and the distributions of their effect sizes."

Chatterjee and his colleagues developed statistical tools to infer this overall architecture from publicly available genome-wide association study data. They then applied these tools to 32 datasets covering 19 quantitative traits and 13 diseases.

The findings show that what is known about many traits represents the "tip of the iceberg." An individual trait could be associated with thousands to tens of thousands of SNPs, each of which has small effect, but which cumulatively make a substantial contribution to the trait variation. Intriguingly, they found that traits related to mental health and ability, such as IQ, depression, and schizophrenia, appear to be influenced by the largest number, on the order of tens of thousands of SNPs, each with tiny effects.

"For the traits we analyzed related to mental health and cognitive ability, there is really a continuum of effect sizes, suggesting a distinct type of genetic architecture," says Chatterjee, who has a joint appointment in Johns Hopkins Medicine's Department of Oncology.

By contrast, the analysis suggested that common chronic diseases such as heart disease and type-2 diabetes typically are influenced by relatively feweron the order of thousandsof SNPs, most of which have small effects, although a sizable group "stick out" for their stronger effects.

Knowing the approximate genetic architecture of a disease or trait allows scientists to predict how informative any new genome-wide association studies for that trait or disease will be, given the sample size. For example, projections in the study suggest that for most traits and diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes, the point of diminishing return for these studies only starts after a sample size reaches several hundred thousand. For psychiatric diseases and cognitive traits, with their "long-tail" distributions of gene effects, diminishing returns usually won't kick in until sample sizes are even larger‐possibly in the millions, Chatterjee says. These results have implications for how useful genetic risk prediction models could be for different diseases depending on the sample size achievable for future studies.

"Our approach at least provides the best available 'road map' of what is needed in future studies," Chatterjee says.

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Understanding genetic architecture of different traits and ...

Analysts See $-0.13 EPS for Cancer Genetics, Inc. (CGIX …

August 13, 2018 - By Kristin Houston

Investors sentiment increased to 1.11 in Q1 2018. Its up 0.20, from 0.91 in 2017Q4. It improved, as 3 investors sold Cancer Genetics, Inc. shares while 6 reduced holdings. 6 funds opened positions while 4 raised stakes. 2.70 million shares or 2.75% less from 2.78 million shares in 2017Q4 were reported.The Illinois-based Northern Tru Corporation has invested 0% in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). Morgan Stanley holds 16,169 shares or 0% of its portfolio. Geode Limited Liability has invested 0% in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). 11,600 were accumulated by Spark Invest Management Ltd Llc. Perkins Cap Management reported 963,600 shares. Virtu Financial Ltd Liability Corporation accumulated 0% or 29,495 shares. Granahan Inv Ma owns 235,502 shares. Wells Fargo Mn reported 0% in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). National Bank Of America Corporation De has invested 0% in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). Barclays Public Limited Company has invested 0% of its portfolio in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). Moreover, Jacobs Levy Equity Management Incorporated has 0% invested in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). The New York-based Hrt Lc has invested 0.02% in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX). Vanguard Group Inc holds 583,886 shares or 0% of its portfolio. Dimensional Fund Advsr Limited Partnership reported 19,866 shares. Diker Mngmt Ltd Liability invested 0.04% of its portfolio in Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX).

Analysts expect Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX) to report $-0.13 EPS on August, 14 before the open.They anticipate $0.03 EPS change or 18.75 % from last quarters $-0.16 EPS. After having $-0.16 EPS previously, Cancer Genetics, Inc.s analysts see -18.75 % EPS growth. The stock decreased 3.22% or $0.0314 during the last trading session, reaching $0.9451. About 69,965 shares traded. Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX) has declined 74.25% since August 13, 2017 and is downtrending. It has underperformed by 86.82% the S&P500.

Among 2 analysts covering Cancer Genetics (NASDAQ:CGIX), 1 have Buy rating, 0 Sell and 1 Hold. Therefore 50% are positive. Cancer Genetics had 3 analyst reports since April 3, 2018 according to SRatingsIntel. The firm earned Hold rating on Tuesday, April 3 by Maxim Group. The stock of Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX) has Buy rating given on Tuesday, May 29 by H.C. Wainwright. The company was maintained on Wednesday, June 27 by H.C. Wainwright.

Cancer Genetics, Inc. develops, commercializes, and provides molecular and biomarker tests and services in the United States, India, and China. The company has market cap of $26.22 million. The Companys tests enable physicians to personalize the clinical management of each individual patient by providing genomic information to diagnose, monitor, and inform cancer treatment; and enable biotech and pharmaceutical companies involved in oncology trials to select candidate populations and reduce adverse drug reactions by providing information regarding genomic factors influencing subject responses to therapeutics. It currently has negative earnings. The company's clinical services provide information on diagnosis, prognosis, and predicting treatment outcomes of cancers to guide patient management.

More news for Cancer Genetics, Inc. (NASDAQ:CGIX) were recently published by: Nasdaq.com, which released: Cancer Genetics to Report Second Quarter 2018 Financial Results on August 14, 2018 on August 07, 2018. Globenewswire.coms article titled: Cancer Genetics Closes $2.625 million Convertible Note Financing and published on July 18, 2018 is yet another important article.

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Analysts See $-0.13 EPS for Cancer Genetics, Inc. (CGIX ...