Sunday, September 12, 2010

Research Experience for PARSE Fellows @ NASA

Saint Peter's College - PARSE Institute
Summer 2010

PARSE Fellows Research Team: Dr. J. Lopez, Dr. J. Clayton, Dr. M. Armani, Mrs. S. Lingat, Ms. E. Concepcion, Mr. R. Toegel, Mr. A. DeCaro, Mr. F. Williams

The PARSE Team spent the summer designing an experiment to test the effects of acoustic waves on two solutions with different concentrations of cornstarch and water. The solutions were placed in an acoustic chamber designed in the lab and tested under the force of gravity and in microgravity (F = 0 g)in the Weightless Wonder (G1 Force airplane). The last week of research was spent at NASA Headquarters (Texas) training, setting up the experiment and finally testing during weightless flight. It was an incredible and unforgettable experience. The link below shows the experiment in microgravity.

http://www.youtube.com/user/MrDscienceworld?feature=mhum#p/u

Thoughts About Brains

Science Education > Standard > Headline Discoveries > Spring 2010

Thoughts About Brains

Without doubt, the human brain is a fascinating and complex organ that is the controlling center of the nervous system. Scientists have been studying it for centuries, and every new discovery is a "eureka" moment that gives us a better understanding of how our brains work. Still, there's much to be discovered, and many believe that we use only a fraction of the full capacity of our gray matter.

Speed Thinking

How long does it take us to form a thought? Nerves operate at different speeds and travel different distances, so the speed of thought varies. In 1850, German physiologist Hermann von Helmholtz discovered that it took one one-tenth of a second for a signal to travel from a frog's leg muscle to its brain. He also found that people reacted more quickly to a shock at the base of the spine than to one in the toe.

More recently, Johns Hopkins scientists found that it takes humans about 300 milliseconds to recognize a picture and another 250 to 450 milliseconds to fully comprehend it. Comprehension was faster when the picture was something familiar. They came up with a speed of thought ranging between 550 and 750 milliseconds.

Speed thinking is critical to our ability to react to a sight, sound, touch, odor or taste. Tim Gollisch of the Max Planck Institute of Neurobiology in Germany discovered that "speed boosters" in the nerve cells in our eyes allow the nerves to send signals to our brains before the entire picture is received. And the thicker and more insulated the nerve, the faster its signals reach the brain. In 1854, physicist William Thomson demonstrated that the wider telegraph wires sent signals faster and farther. The same can be said of our nerves. Myelin insulation is important to speed, too. Signals can travel up to 180mph from heavily myelinated neurons in the spine to the brain.

But neurons lacking myelin move at only 0.5mph.

Determining the speed of cognitive functions such as language processing can help scientists address comprehension and word loss associated with strokes, dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Although "speed thinkers" are apt to score higher on intelligence tests, scientists aren't convinced that faster responses always equal higher intelligence.

Brain Farts

Yes, there really are such things. Science has proven it, but refers to them as "maladaptive brain activity changes" that cause us to make dumb mistakes when doing mundane things.

You've probably experienced them. Maybe you're driving home from work - the usual route - and miss your exit; or abruptly "awake," surprised at where you are but don't remember getting there. "Brains love to pick up regularities, patterns, rules," says Vince Calhoun, an expert in MRI analysis at the University of New Mexico. "As you generate an expectation, you become less attentive."

Research indicates that brain farts are innate types of cognitive mistakes. The default mode of the brain is inward thinking. When processing a repetitive task such as the drive home, the brain goes on autopilot so that the default mode network (DMN) can concentrate on what to make for dinner or work to be done tomorrow. When the DMN and the autopilot collide (and they will), a brain fart -Â and human error - occur. Immediately after, the stress hormone cortisol surges as the brain hits its panic button. Depending on the magnitude of the brain fart and result of the error, it may take us a little while to settle down.

Male vs. Female Brains

All of us learn differently, and some differences are based on gender. The brain of a newborn boy is 12-20 percent larger than that of a girl. But the size of the brain is relative to the child's body weight, so there's no real difference between boy brains and girl brains. In male adults, the brain weighs approximately 11-12 percent more than that of a woman. But men's heads are also 2 percent larger than women's.

A recent study indicates that, depending on gender, different parts of the brain are used to process language. In girls' brains, the language areas were used more to decide if spoken or written words rhymed, while boys applied more of the areas that receive the input to make that determination.


http://www.fishersci.com/wps/portal/CMSTATIC?href=ScienceEducation/scienceEduStandard/Features/Headline_Discoveries/2010_Spring/se_std_ThoughtsAboutBrains_090210_1338.jsp&store=ScienceEducation&segment=scienceEduStandard&WT.mc_id=CCG100831061827P

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Reflection

What I Learned Today!

1. How to create a blog.
2. How to create a bloglist.
3. How to add a profile picture to my blog.
4. How horrible it is to sit in a room without AC.
5. How to say #4 on my list using the PC term: thermally challenged.

Once in a Lifetime Opportunity

This summer I have the opportunity to do research at St. Peters College as a PARSE Institute fellow. I am part of a special team that is working on experiments that will be carried out in the Vomit Comet at the NASA Space Station in Texas. I am very excited about this exciting experience because I, with the rest of the team, will be doing experiments at zero gravity (microgravity). Yes, it's a once in a lifetime deal. I'm definitely up for it!!!

Podcasts

What I Know!
A podcast is a way of sharing knowledge about a specific subject by reporting about the subject while playing images that represent or relate to the information being shared. GarageBand is a great program to use to create podcasts. A script is written with all of the information that will be read. The images are saved and inserted at specific time intervals. Publishing the podcast is possible by using iTunes. Podcasting is a great means for students to practice writing, communicating and using technology in the classroom.