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TS-Si News Service
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Saturday, 04 July 2009
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Champaign, IL, USA. A new analysis of data from dozens of studies illuminates how we choose what we do and do not hear. People tend to avoid information that contradicts what they already think or believe, but certain factors can cause them to seek out, or at least consider, other points of view.
For some, life can settle into a routine of unexamined assumptions, often a continuation of childhood conditioning, and settled practices. Others do the opposite, living in constant flux. For most people, the normal rhythms of life entwine with aging and bring many changes that are integrated into the life as led, as seen from the end of their lives.
We swim in a sea of information, but filter out most of what we see and hear as irrelevant noise, revisiting our criteria from time to time and revising our point of view. Most humans deal with this selection process without traumatic incident. However, it can become very distressful for those with a fetishistic need to objectify their inner vision of themselves. Overly disappointed if the information fails to meet their expectations, they can act out to achieve some degree of validation in the external world.
But, there are those who when faced with uncomfortable truths and radically changed circumstances, integrate the implications and proceed successfully in the face of changed circumstances. How does this happen — and why?
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 Monica Dux Saturday, 04 July 2009
Melbourne, Victoria, AUS. It seems Tammy Wynette got it right after all. In a new twist to the so-called "mummy wars", conservative US journalist Megan Basham has released a book titled Beside Every Successful Man: a woman's guide to having it all. In it she not only claims that most women would be happier if they stayed at home with their children, but also that they should stand by their man by focusing on his career rather than their own.
Typical of those who employ mummy wa |
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 John Gramlich Saturday, 04 July 2009
Washington, DC, USA. State governments so far are using almost all of their stimulus transportation dollars to build and improve roads and highways, while devoting only about 6 percent to public transit systems, according to a 50-state study released this week by a group seeking to improve urban planning.
Smart Growth America criticized the $6.6 billion that states have allocated for building new roads while providing relatively little for public transit projects that could create 31 per |
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 John Pilger Friday, 03 July 2009
Reflecting on the idea of a journey, John Pilger wonders if the unsuspected and tragic can change everything.
Sydney, NSW, AUS. T. S. Eliot wrote that the point of any journey was to find out where you came from. As I bore my bulging canvas bag to the wharf at Circular Quay, not far from where my Irish great-great-grandparents had landed in leg irons, I hoped the point of my journey would become clearer once my ship had sailed. The Bretagne was my ship; it was white with blue stripes alo |
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 TS-Si News Service Friday, 03 July 2009
Fairfax, VA, USA. Current research shows that both human and salamander tissues retain the a kind of "memory" when they regenerate. With few exceptions, the new regenerated tissue is the same type as the original.
Salamander regeneration is legendary: the creatures are able to replace lost limbs, damaged lungs, sliced spinal cord — even bits of brain. It had been assumed that "pluripotent" cells, like human embryonic stem cells, were the soure of an have the uncanny |
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Science & Medicine
 TS-Si News Service Thursday, 02 July 2009
Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Scientists have shown a high rate of chromosomal abnormalities following conception that may explain comparatively low fertility rates in humans.
Researchers showed for... |
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 TS-Si News Service Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Los Angeles, CA, USA. Research shows that chronic grief activates pleasure areas of the brain, findings that could change how health professionals treat the disorder.
Grief is universal, and most ... |
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Living
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TS-Si News Service
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Wednesday, 01 July 2009
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Bloomington, IN, USA. Most vibrators are kept around the house under assumed identities (e.g., as a relaxer for back cramps). However, two parallel studies conducted among nationally representative samples of adult American...
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TS-Si News Service
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Sunday, 28 June 2009
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Winston-Salem, NC, USA. It shouldn't come as a surprise that men, as a group, achive much greater consensus about whom they find attractive than do women. The surprising part of a new study is the degree to which such perce...
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Stephen C. Fehr
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Saturday, 27 June 2009
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Washington, DC, USA. From the minute President Obama declared that the $787 billion federal economic stimulus package would save or create 3.5 million jobs, state officials have been confused about how to count those jobs. ...
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Rob Silverblatt
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Friday, 26 June 2009
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Washington, DC, USA. Even as the recession chips away at mental health services across the country, Georgia’s around-the-clock psychiatric hotline is finding a way to weather the storm — and other states are watching cl...
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Opinion
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Lisa Jain Thompson
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Tuesday, 30 June 2009
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Fairfax, VA, USA. Like many women out of the public eye [N1], what most women born transsexual want more than anything else is not to be noticed, at least no more so than any other woman [N2].
Women learn early that, in o...
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Peter Sellick
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Monday, 29 June 2009
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Subiaco, WA, AUS. The climbing frames in the park at the end of my street, to which I take my grandchildren, are so safe our four-year-old is bored. There is a old steam roller that may be climbed upon which the council thr...
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Neal Peirce
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Monday, 29 June 2009
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Washington, DC, USA. For at least a half century, “silos” and borders have been tripping up effective governance in America.
The silos loom highest at the federal level, where massive departments from Transportation to...
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Lisa Jain Thompson
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Saturday, 27 June 2009
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Fairfax, VA, USA. Most sexually reproducing species spend most of their evolutionary history punctuated into an equilibria equally divided into male and female. Very few of us ever check the “other” box. Boy or Girl, Gi...
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The Nation
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