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Japanese Group Reconstructs Visual Images from Brain Activity Patterns

Brain images
© ATRThe drawing illustrates the "visual image reconstruction" technology developed by the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) and others, which reconstructs figures seen by a subject into images by measuring human brain activity.
A Japanese research group developed the "visual image reconstruction" technology to reconstruct figures seen by a subject into images by measuring human brain activity.

The group was led by the Advanced Telecommunications Research Institute International (ATR) and National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT).

By using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) system, the new technology measures the patterns of brain activity in the cerebral visual cortex invoked by image information entered through eyes. The field of vision is divided into small areas, and the contrast in each area is estimated based on the corresponding brain activity pattern.

Frog

Ancient armored amphibian had world's oddest bite

A peculiar amphibian that was clad in bony armor prowled warm lakes 210 million years ago, catching fish and other tasty snacks with one of the most unusual bites in the history of life on Earth.

The creature called Gerrothorax pulcherrimus, which lived alongside some of the early dinosaurs, opened its mouth not by dropping its lower jaw, as other vertebrate animals do. Instead, it lifted back the top of its head in a way that looked a lot like lifting the lid of a toilet seat.

"It's weird. It's the ugliest animal in the world," Harvard University's Farish Jenkins, one of the scientists who describe the mechanics of its bite in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, said in a telephone interview on Friday.

"You almost can't imagine holding your jaws still and lifting your head back to take a bite," Jenkins said.

"There are some vertebrates that will lift their heads slightly or the upper jaws (when they bite). Some salamanders do it slightly. Some fish do it slightly. But no animal is known to have done it this extensively," Jenkins added.

Info

Biggest Full Moon of the Year

No, you can not see Neil Armstrong's footprint. But go ahead and look: The full Moon of Dec. 12th is the biggest and brightest full Moon of the year.

It's no illusion. Some full Moons are genuinely larger than others and this Friday's is a whopper. Why? The Moon's orbit is an ellipse with one side 50,000 km closer to Earth than the other: diagram. In the language of astronomy, the two extremes are called "apogee" (far away) and "perigee" (nearby). On Dec. 12th, the Moon becomes full a scant 4 hours after reaching perigee, making it 14% bigger and 30% brighter than lesser full Moons we've seen earlier in 2008.

Telescope

Geminid Meteor Shower

The annual Geminid meteor shower peaks on Dec. 13th and Dec. 14th when Earth passes through a stream of debris from extinct comet 3200 Phaethon. Bright moonlight will reduce the number of visible meteors from the usual 100/hr to only 20/hr or so. That's still a nice show.

Meteor

Constant Comet Threat

Halley's Comet
© Lick ObservatoryHalley's Comet becomes visible to the unaided eye about every 76 years as it nears the sun.
It certainly captures the imagination: a star passing silently by our solar system knocks a deadly barrage of comets towards Earth. However, recent simulations by one group of researchers has shown that these star-induced comet showers may not be as dramatic as once thought.

The idea of nearby stars influencing comets goes back to 1950, when the astronomer Jan Hendrik Oort hypothesized an invisible repository of comets - the so-called Oort cloud - swarming around the solar system out to a distance of 100,000 AU (one AU is the distance between the sun and the Earth).

Oort assumed that stars passing through the cloud would cause a fresh batch of comets to fall in towards the sun, where they become visible to astronomers. Such a disturbance could have long term effects.

"The comets we see now could be from a stellar passage hundreds of millions of years ago," said Hans Rickman of the Uppsala Astronomical Observatory in Sweden.

However, Rickman and his colleagues have confirmed that star encounters alone cannot explain comet behavior. Using a computer model of the Oort cloud, they show that gravity effects from the galaxy are equally important. The results are reported in a recent article in the journal Celestial Mechanics and Dynamical Astronomy.

Comment: Have you read Cosmic Turkey Shoot?


Display

Archimedes and the 2000-year-old computer

Antikythera mechanism
© Jo MarchantThe largest recovered fragment of the Antikythera mechanism, in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens.
Marcellus and his men blockaded Syracuse, in Sicily, for two years. The Roman general expected to conquer the Greek city state easily, but the ingenious siege towers and catapults designed by Archimedes helped to keep his troops at bay.

Then, in 212 BC, the Syracusans neglected their defences during a festival to the goddess Artemis, and the Romans finally breached the city walls. Marcellus wanted Archimedes alive, but it wasn't to be. According to ancient historians, Archimedes was killed in the chaos; by one account a soldier ran him through with a sword as he was in the middle of a mathematical proof.

One of Archimedes's creations was saved, though. The general took back to Rome a mechanical bronze sphere that showed the motions of the sun, moon and planets as seen from Earth.

The sphere stayed in Marcellus's family for generations, until the Roman author Cicero saw it in the first century BC. "The invention of Archimedes deserves special admiration because he had thought out a way to represent accurately by a single device for turning the globe those various and divergent movements with their different rates of speed," he wrote. "The moon was always as many revolutions behind the sun on the bronze contrivance as would agree with the number of days it was behind it in the sky."

Magnify

'Oldest human brain' discovered

Oldest Brain
The brain matter can be seen as a dark area at the top of the brain

Archaeologists have found the remains of what could be Britain's oldest surviving human brain. The team, excavating a York University site, discovered a skull containing a yellow substance which scans showed to be shrunken, but brain-shaped. Brains consist of fatty tissue which microbes in the soil would absorb, so neurologists believe the find could be some kind of fossilised brain.

Sun

MIT scientist take a step closer to cheap fusion power

Fusion power is a tantalizing, but frustrating branch of alternative energy research. For years scientists have poured countless hours and money into trying to achieve the elusive goal of generating a fusion reaction that produces more power than it consumes. The sun can do it; but we just can't seem to.

With the ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) project ramping up, the international community's largest effort to date is about to launch, but key problems remain that could stop the project. Among the most pressing issues are containment and control of the plasma field. While critical advances in ultra-strong steels may help with the containment problems, control of the plasma -- an ultra-hot electrically charged broth of hydrogen isotopes -- remained problematic.

Camera

First images of the damage that shut down the Large Hadron Collider

damaged the Large Hadron Collider's magnets
© CERNA burst of pressure from escaping helium damaged the Large Hadron Collider's magnets.
In September, in a circular 27-kilometre tunnel beneath the Swiss-French border, the most complex machine ever built was switched on.

Question

Are daughters-in-law to blame for menopause?

Image
© Tansy Spinks/MillenniumAre daughters-in-law to blame for women losing the ability to reproduce with years left to live?
It flies in the face of natural selection, yet in humans it seems fixed and universal: at around age 50, not far past the midpoint of life, normal healthy women lose their capacity to bear children. Following a decade of gentle winding down, the whole reproductive system screeches to a halt. It is as though, after a few years of wearing bifocals, all women suddenly went blind.

Menopause is a mystery. It leaves women with 20, 30, perhaps even 50 years of life - squandered time in evolutionary terms, because no further genes can be passed on. Yet the selection pressure for menopause must have been strong: there are no known pockets of women around the world who do not go through it. All the evidence suggests menopause has been around a long time, and that the age at which it hits has changed little. Increased longevity seems not to have budged our closing hours. Nor, apparently, has lifestyle; it hits hunter-gatherers at pretty much the same age as hip New Yorkers.

In an attempt to explain this phenomenon, anthropologists suggest that menopause lets women see their last child through to maturity, or that it enables them to provide for their grandchildren. Both ideas make evolutionary sense, since they allow mothers to pass on more of their genes to subsequent generations. But when the numbers are crunched, they just don't seem enough to explain why women would forgo turning out a few more babies of their own. "The sums don't add up - the benefits aren't sufficient to stop breeding," says Michael Cant from the University of Exeter at Penryn, UK. "There's a missing piece of the puzzle." As a zoologist, whose main work has been in banded mongooses and paper wasps, he had an idea about what that missing piece might be. Put bluntly, he suspects that daughters-in-law could be to blame.