Tag Archives: science

AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for May 9, 2013

San Diego’s City Council is continuing to examine Mayor Bob Filner’s budget proposal. This morning they examine the pension, Housing Commission, and Civic parts of the budget. This afternoon they look at the Convention Center funding.

In a related story … Just yesterday San Diego’s Independent Budget Analyst said that the Convention Center has over 31 million dollars of backlogged maintenance.

Mayor Filner is meeting with the press today at noon. It’s all part of his regular question-and-answer sessions. He’s open to talking about anything the press wants

At 10:00 this morning California state firefighters will open California Wildfire Awareness Week with a press conference. All week officials from Cal Fire will remind us about being prepared for a wild fire. The statewide series of events ends Saturday

In court this afternoon Tim Lambesis, a former Christian Rock star and current heavy metal’er will be arraigned for trying to hire a hit man to kill his ex-wife.

And this evening the San Diego County Taxpayers Association is hosting its 18th annual Golden awards dinner. They recognize what they see at the best and worst of government spending. The festivities begin at 7:00 PM at the San Diego Marriott Marquis and Marina.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for May 6, 2013

It is a rainy day in San Diego … sporadic showers and drizzle is making the AM commute a hassle.

Jury selection in the second trial of the man accused of shooting at people on the freeway is today. Stephen Dragasits is accused of shooting at random cars driving along some of San Diego’s freeway injuring a 21-year-old. That begins at 9:00 AM in San Diego’s downtown courthouse.

Also at 9:00 this morning San Diego’s City Council is continuing to review Mayor Bob Filner’s proposed budget. Budget items on the agenda for today are police, fire, libraries, and parks.

This afternoon at 3:30 Sweetwater Union High School District’s first annual Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Math or STEAM Summit starts. They are showing off how student and teacher use iPads in class and in their robotics program. Also showing off is the Mayor’s Cup Cyber Challenge, Visual and Performing Arts projects that use art, music, and technology. It’s all free and open to the public at Otay Ranch High School.

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President BRAIN Initiative Has San Diego Ties.

Today the President announced a major initiative program to map the human brain, and San Diego’s Salk Institute for Biological Studies will play a major roll.

The Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative will get $100 million out next year’s budget.

Salk researchers are aiming to map the brain’s neural networks with the hope of better understanding how the brain works.

“We have the chance to improve the lives of not just millions, but billions of people on this planet,” said the president, “It will require us to embrace the spirit of discovery that made America—America.”

Terrence J. Sejnowski chairman of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory at the Salk Institute was with the President in Washington, D.C.

“This initiative is a boost for the brain like the Human Genome Project was for the genes,” says Sejnowski, the Francis Crick Chair and head of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory at Salk.

“This is the start of the million neuron march.”

In a press release the Salk Institute says …

Neuroscientist Terry Sejnowksi attends White House announcement collaborative BRAIN Initiative

Newswise — LA JOLLA, CA—-Salk neuroscientist Terrence J. Sejnowski joined President Barack Obama in Washington, D.C., on April 2, 2013, at the launch of the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative-a major Administration neuroscience effort that advances and builds upon collaborative scientific work by leading brain researchers such as Salk’s own Sejnowski.

“We have the chance to improve the lives of not just millions, but billions of people on this planet,” said the president, “It will require us to embrace the spirit of discovery that made America—America.”

In his introductory remarks, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, dubbed Obama the “Scientist in Chief,” and said, “Asking the people in this room to delay innovation would be like asking the cherry trees to stop blooming.”

Obama compared the BRAIN Initiative to the Human Genome Project, which mapped the entire human genome and ushered in a new era of genetics-based medicine. “Every dollar spent on the human genome has returned $140.00 to our economy,” the president said. Instead of charting genes, BRAIN will help visualize the brain activity directly involved in such vital functions as seeing, hearing and storing memories, a crucial step in understanding how to treat diseases and injuries of the nervous system.

The BRAIN Initiative is launching with approximately $100 million in funding for research supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), and the National Science Foundation (NSF) in the President’s Fiscal Year 2014 budget.

Foundations and private research institutions are also investing in the neuroscience that will advance the BRAIN Initiative. Along with the Salk Institute, they include The Allen Institute for Brain Science, the Kavli Foundation, and The Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

“This initiative is a boost for the brain like the Human Genome Project was for the genes,” says Sejnowski, the Francis Crick Chair and head of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory at Salk. “This is the start of the million neuron march.”

The BRAIN initiative and its focus on leveraging emerging technologies dovetails with the Salk Institute’s Dynamic Brain Initiative, a neuroscience initiative focused on providing a better understanding of the brain, spinal cord and peripheral nervous system. The Salk Institute itself is home to several pioneering tool builders, among them Edward M. Callaway, already famous among systems neuroscientists for using a modified rabies virus to trace neuronal connections in the visual system.

“Scientists have known since the time of Galileo that new tools can open up whole new lines of research,” says Callaway, holder of the Audrey Geisel Chair in Biomedical Science. “But for us, tools aren’t just mechanical instruments, they can be viruses, genes, chemical dyes, or even photons.”

Tools are also mathematical, explains Sejnowski. “When you are trying to understand the electrical and chemical interactions of millions of brain cells, you are looking at a multi-dimensional problem, which can only be solved by computational modeling,” he says. “My lab has as many mathematicians and physicists and engineers as it has biologists.”
Summing up his excitement over the promise of BRAIN, Sejnowski says, “Imagine how it must have felt to be a rocket engineer when Kennedy said we would reach for the moon. You know there’s an almost unimaginable amount of hard work ahead of you—and yet you can’t wait to get started.”

The initiative builds on discussions between a group of leading neuroscientists and nanotechnologists from around the country, including Sejnowski. The scientists published an article on the topic in the March 15 issue of Science, in which they noted that the Human Genome Project yielded $800 billion in economic impact from a $3.8 billion investment—and that a similar neuroscience initiative could expect to produce similar returns.

President Obama emphasized the impact of the genome-mapping project in his February 2013 State of the Union address and the importance of neuroscience for addressing human diseases. “Today, our scientists are mapping the human brain to unlock the answers to Alzheimer’s,” he said. “Now is the time to reach a level of research and development not seen since the height of the Space Race.”
Sejnowski says BRAIN could ultimately help reduce the overwhelming costs for treatment and long-term care of brain-related disorders, which Price Waterhouse Coopers estimated at $515 billion for the United States alone in 2012.

“Many of the most devastating human brain disorders, such as depression and schizophrenia, only seem to emerge when large-scale assemblies of neurons are involved,” says Sejnowski. “Other terrible conditions, such as blindness and paralysis, result from disruptions in circuit connections. The more precise our information about specific circuits, the more we will understand what went wrong, where it went wrong, and how to target therapies.”

Computational neuroscience, a field Sejnowski helped establish, will be a central avenue of research advanced under the new Initiative. One of only ten living individuals to have been elected to three branches of the National Academies—National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering and Institute of Medicine—Sejnowski co-authored 23 Problems in Systems Neuroscience, a foundational book that lays out many of the questions BRAIN is aiming to answer.

Computational neuroscience focuses on understanding how a circuit of hundreds to thousands of brain cells, which includes neurons, as well as associated cells, such as astrocytes, allows us to do something as simple as reaching out a hand or as complex as processing rich visual information. The only way to fully understand systems, such as olfaction or vision, is to map and probe the entire circuit, which is exactly what the BRAIN proposes to do.

“We’re not jumping in and mapping the entire active human brain,” says Sejnowski, “But we are at a point where we can develop the tools to map entire circuits, first in invertebrates and eventually in mammals.”

In fact, part of the reason that the neuroscience field is now gaining momentum is that advances in engineering and physics are allowing scientists to develop incredibly tiny tools to explore the molecular world of living cells. It is no accident, says Sejnowski, that the Science paper included a cadre of nanotechnology pioneers as coauthors. “It’s like wishing for a faster car, and finding out that engineers from Bugatti and Lotus are offering to help,” Sejnowski says of the cross-disciplinary collaboration.

New tools that will be developed under BRAIN will push the cutting-edge even further, enabling scientists to look at the brain with better spatial and temporal resolution, as well as analyze the millions of bits of accumulated data.

About the Salk Institute for Biological Studies:

The Salk Institute for Biological Studies is one of the world’s preeminent basic research institutions, where internationally renowned faculty probe fundamental life science questions in a unique, collaborative, and creative environment. Focused both on discovery and on mentoring future generations of researchers, Salk scientists make groundbreaking contributions to our understanding of cancer, aging, Alzheimer’s, diabetes and infectious diseases by studying neuroscience, genetics, cell and plant biology, and related disciplines.

Faculty achievements have been recognized with numerous honors, including Nobel Prizes and memberships in the National Academy of Sciences. Founded in 1960 by polio vaccine pioneer Jonas Salk, M.D., the Institute is an independent nonprofit organization and architectural landmark.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for March 19, 2013

This morning the San Diego Zoo’s panda cub Xiao Liwu will have his first snow day.

In court … the preliminary hearing for a man accused of having sex with multiple teenage girls …and testimony begins in the mental competency hearing for David Zepeda, he’s accused of stealing $6 million in a foreclosure scam

San Diego County Board of Supervisors meets today on the agenda … a plan to help the homeless and rooster regulations. Yes I said roosters.

And the city council is meeting too … they’ll be talking about supporting the Tourism Marketing District and a proclamation honoring the San Diego Festival of Science and Engineering.

Finally this morning at Cathedral Catholic High School a mass is being held for the family involved in a horrible head on collision Sunday night. The School’s head basketball coach’s family was injured in the crash. The mother and three kids were hit head on by a wrong way driver on the freeway and suffered major injuries. Mom and two of the kids are in stable condition wile one child is in the ICU

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for March 4, 2013

This morning more than a thousand nurses will break into dance and song to raise awareness for breast cancer. It’s all part of the 60th Annual Association of peri-Operative Registered Nurses Congress’s breast cancer awareness breakfast. Breast cancer survivor Giuliana Rancic and her husband Bill are going to share their story of survival and maybe even dance with the nurses. The flash mob called the Pink Glove Dance Campaign began in 2009 when Portland Oregon hospital workers wore pink surgical gloves while they danced to raise breast cancer awareness.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for January 14, 2013

The USS Higgins, USS Stockdale and USS William P. Lawrence and their 1200 sailors will deploy. They are Destroyer Squadron 23.

This afternoon a list of appointments by the city of San Diego to the San Diego Association of Governments will be considered.

And tonight the Scripps Institution of Oceanography is going to give a talk about how advances in technology is helping researchers better study moon rocks and could lead to new information about how planets are formed.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for January 2, 2013

Beaches along San Diego’s southern border with Mexico are closed today because of sewage runoff. The tainted water is coming from the Tijuana River witch runs into the Tijuana Estuary then into the ocean just south of the border. Officials believe that currents are pushing the contaminated waters north toward San Diego’s southernmost beaches.

Beaches will remain closed until testing shows them to be safe

High winds are scouring San Diego’s mountain passes and valleys and high surf is pounding its coast line today. The high surf advisory is in effect until about 4 P-M today and winds as high as 60 miles per hour could wind their way through our mountains and valleys.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for December 5, 2012

San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station’s last original steam generator is set to take off for Utah tonight. Traveling at night on a custom 400-foot-long trailer will take the 700,000 pound generator on its three-week journey to Clive Utah.

Southern California Edison, the nuclear generating station’s operator, says that if a person stands 5 to 10 feet away from the generator they will be exposed to a level of radiation roughly equal to a dental X-Ray.

Also today the activist group Citizens Oversight Projects will be speaking out against Southern California Edison’s request to amend its license. This meeting is to determine if an official hearing is needed to make the adjustments to the nuclear power plants license. Its being held in Rockville Maryland and the activist group will be streaming it live on line at w-w-w visual web caster dot com.

And today San Diego’s oldest bar The Waterfront celebrates its 79th birthday. On December fifth 1933 prohibition was repealed and the bar was issued San Diego’s first liquor license. The grandson of Ulysses S Grant, Chaffee Grant, opened with a small bar and just a few stools and a juke box. Today the Waterfront is a local institution.

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A-M Briefing from bowlersdesk.com for November 29 2012

The San Diego County Water Authority is considering a thirty year agreement with a proposed desalination plant in Carlsbad. Environmentalists say no, but the Water Authority says changing seawater into drinking water could be a way of stabilizing supply. Poseidon Resources wants to build the plant near the Aqua Hedionda Lagoon and have it up and running in 2016. They anticipate up to fifty million gallons of fresh water could be made every day. Environmentalists say it building the plant will harm marine life and be a financial risk The meeting is set for one P-M

Surf is up today and through Sunday. A large swell is arriving this morning and will be sending five to eight foot waves to local beaches. The occasional ten foot set is expected on Friday growing to twelve feet on Saturday. Things will begin to die down Sunday.

A man sentenced to 25 years-to-life in prison for stealing a leaf blower is set to be released today. Sergio Ayala will be the second person released under the newly passed Proposition thirty-six. Ayala, a Mexican national, got his third strike in nineteen-ninety-five, but because his first two convictions are for non-violent crimes Ayala can be released. Following his release from San Quentin State Prison Ayala will be deported to Mexico and is expected to return to his family in Tijuana.

And today at eleven a billboard will be unveiled featuring six Bonita Vista High School Students.

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AM Briefing from Bowlersdesk.com for November 27 2012

Yesterday evening a teenage girl was found unconscious in San Diego’s Lincoln Park neighborhood. She was discovered in a vacant lot and immediately taken to the hospital. No word on the extent of her injuries … San Diego PD’s sex crimes in investigating.

And today several San Diego High School students are going to learn about how submersible Remotely Operated Vehicles (or R-O-V) are helping scientists study California’s deep water fisheries. For the past ten years the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (or NOAA) has been conducting this research with the help of San Diego’s fishermen.

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