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For Discussion: Do Couples Have A Better Chance Of Surviving Marriage If They Live Together First?

Practice usually improves performance. This seems to be true for sports, music, and dance, but what about marriage? The most significant change in family living over the past 50 years has been the rise in the number of couples who are living together prior to getting married. In the 1970s only about 10% of couples reported living together without being married. By the late 1990s, about half of women ages 15-44 reported that they had lived with a partner without being married. This has prompted scientists to ask the question, does practice living together improve marital relationships and reduce the risk of divorce? The answer seems to be “no.” Scott Stanley at the University of Denver and his colleagues studied people who were in their first or second marriages to find out how cohabitation influenced marital quality and the likelihood of divorce. For first marriages, people who cohabitate prior to marriage results in less positive interactions and more conflict when compared to people who do not cohabitate. However, people who cohabitate after becoming engaged look more similar to those who never cohabitate. In short, both those who never cohabitate and those who cohabitate only after becoming engaged have more positive marital relationships and are less divorce prone than those who cohabitate prior to becoming engaged. Stanley suggests that cohabitators who are not engaged drift into marriage without the same level of commitment as the other types of couples. The researchers also found that in addition to having lower quality marital relationships, couples who cohabitated prior to engagement were also more likely to divorce when compared with the other two groups. So what about second marriages, does this same effect appear? Among second marriages, cohabitation prior to marriage appears to result in lower marital quality regardless of whether the couple had become engaged or not. The researchers suggest that “engagement” has a different meaning for those contemplating second marriages and that sometimes the engagement period is a long period of time that reflects a reluctance to marry rather than a step toward marriage. Thus, some engaged cohabitating couples considering second marriages might be using “cohabitation” as an alternative to making a commitment to get married. We don’t know if cohabitation prior to a second marriage is related to divorce. Scientists haven’t looked at this issue. Commonsense would seem to suggest that cohabitation ought to provide a proving ground for marriage–a chance to work out the rhythms of getting along. This report by Stanley and his colleagues adds to a body of knowledge that has been accumulating for over a decade of research that seems to suggest otherwise. Successful marital relationships seem to be more than figuring out who takes out the trash and even how to resolve conflicts over who takes out the trash. Although learning to resolve differences is very important, marriage also includes an important dimension of “commitment” to the relationship that motivates couples to work on finding better ways to get along and find happiness. Discuss… Source

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For Discussion: Do Couples Have A Better Chance Of Surviving Marriage If They Live Together First?

Schieffer Asks Dem Guests: Why Is Your Party So Mad They’re Saying F-words About the President?

It only took three days, but someone at CBS News finally realized that at least one House Democrat on Thursday vulgarly referred to the President of the United States. Unlike most of his colleagues in the media, Bob Schieffer was so disturbed by this revelation that he asked two different Democrat guests about it on the most recent installment of “Face the Nation” (video follows with transcript and commentary): read more

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Schieffer Asks Dem Guests: Why Is Your Party So Mad They’re Saying F-words About the President?

Mexican Cartels Blockcade City With Burning Cars

At least three people were killed, including an eight-month-old baby apparently caught in the crossfire. Michoacan, in western Mexico, is a stronghold of a powerful drugs cartel known as La Familia Michoacana. The five main roads leading in and out of Morelia were blocked by burning cars and buses, police said. Gunmen fired into the air to force drivers and passengers out of their vehicles before setting them ablaze. Schools kept children inside their classrooms for their protection, and the city's university was closed, the Mexican newspaper El Universal reported. Fighting broke out as police moved in to clear the blockades. The upsurge in violence in Michoacan began on Wednesday when federal police went into the city of Apatzingan to search for suspected La Familia gang members, police said. They quickly came under fire with automatic weapons, and police reinforcements were also attacked as they drove to assist their colleagues. Army troops and helicopters were also brought in, and the cartel gunmen retreated, blocking the road behind them with burning vehicles. One police officer was killed along with two civilians – a baby and a young woman. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11966108 added by: ibrake4rappers13

Mexican Cartels Blockcade City With Burning Cars

At least three people were killed, including an eight-month-old baby apparently caught in the crossfire. Michoacan, in western Mexico, is a stronghold of a powerful drugs cartel known as La Familia Michoacana. The five main roads leading in and out of Morelia were blocked by burning cars and buses, police said. Gunmen fired into the air to force drivers and passengers out of their vehicles before setting them ablaze. Schools kept children inside their classrooms for their protection, and the city's university was closed, the Mexican newspaper El Universal reported. Fighting broke out as police moved in to clear the blockades. The upsurge in violence in Michoacan began on Wednesday when federal police went into the city of Apatzingan to search for suspected La Familia gang members, police said. They quickly came under fire with automatic weapons, and police reinforcements were also attacked as they drove to assist their colleagues. Army troops and helicopters were also brought in, and the cartel gunmen retreated, blocking the road behind them with burning vehicles. One police officer was killed along with two civilians – a baby and a young woman. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11966108 added by: ibrake4rappers13

Don’t trust what you see!

Brain’s visual circuits edit what we see before we see it. The brain’s visual neurons continually develop predictions of what they will perceive and then correct erroneous assumptions as they take in additional external information, according to new research done at Duke University. This new mechanism for visual cognition challenges the currently held model of sight and could change the way neuroscientists study the brain. Neurons in the brain predict and edit what we see before we see it, the researchers found. The new vision model is called predictive coding. It is more complex and adds an extra dimension to the standard model of sight. The prevailing model has been that neurons process incoming data from the retina through a series of hierarchical layers. In this bottom-up system, the lower neurons first detect an object’s features, such as horizontal or vertical lines. The neurons send that information to the next level of brain cells that identify other specific features and feed the emerging image to the next layer of neurons, which add additional details. The image travels up the neuron ladder until it is completely formed. But new brain imaging data from a study led by Duke researcher Tobias Egner provides “clear and direct evidence” that the standard picture of vision, called feature detection, is incomplete. The data, published Dec. 8 in the Journal of Neuroscience, show that the brain predicts what it will see and edits those predictions in a top-down mechanism, said Egner, who is an assistant professor of psychology and neuroscience. In this system, the neurons at each level form and send context-sensitive predictions about what an image might be to the next lower neuron level. The predictions are compared with the incoming sensory data. Any mismatches, or prediction errors, between what the neurons expected to see and what they observe are sent up the neuron ladder. Each neuron layer then adjusts its perceptions of an image in order to eliminate prediction error at the next lower layer. Finally, once all prediction error is eliminated, “the visual cortex has assigned its best guess interpretation of what an object is, and a person actually sees the object,” Egner said. He noted that this happens subconsciously in a matter of milliseconds. “You never even really know you’reface and house imagesdoing it,” he said. Egner and his colleagues wanted to capture the process almost as it happened. The team used functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging, or fMRI, brain scans of the fusiform face area (FFA), a region that deals with recognizing faces. The researchers monitored 16 subjects’ brains as they observed faces or houses framed in different colored boxes that predicted the likelihood of the picture being a face or house. Study participants were told to press a button when they observed an inverted image of a face or house, but the researchers were measuring something else. By changing the face-frame or house-frame color combination, the researchers controlled and measured the FFA neural response to tease apart responses to the stimulus, face expectation and error processing. If the feature detection model were correct, the FFA neural response should be stronger for faces than houses, irrespective of the subjects’ expectations. But Egner and his colleagues found that if subjects had a high expectation of seeing a face, their neural response was nearly the same whether they were actually shown a face or a house. The study goes on to use computational modeling to show that this pattern of neural activation can only be explained by a shared contribution from face expectation and prediction error. This study provides support for a “very different view” of how the visual system works, said Scott Murray, a University of Washington neuroscientist who was not involved in the research. Instead of high neuron firing rates providing information about the presence of a particular feature, high firing rates are instead associated with a deviation from what neurons expect to see, Murray explained. “These deviation signals presumably provide useful tags for something the visual system has to process more to understand.” Egner said that theorists have been developing the predictive coding model for the past 30 years, but no previous studies have directly tested it against the feature detection model. “This paper is provocative and motions toward a change in the preconception of how vision works. In essence, more scientists may become more sympathetic to the new model,” he said. Murray also said that the findings could influence the way neuroscientists continue to study the brain. Most research assumes that if a brain region has a large response to a particular visual image, and then it is somehow responsible for, or specialized for, processing the content of the image. This research “challenges that assumption,” he said, explaining that future studies have to take into account expectations that participants have for the visual images being presented. added by: UtopianSky

Kraft Foods shooting 2010

Unidentified employees talk outside the scene of a workplace shooting at the Kraft Foods Inc. facility in Northeast Philadelphia on Thursday Sept. 9, 2010. Kraft Foods facility workers attempt to get back to work just hours after a violent act ended with two of their colleagues dead, and another critically injured in the hospital. Police say two people have been killed in a shooting inside a Kraft Foods Inc. facility in northeast Philadelphia. One person has been critically injured. Lt. Frank

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Kraft Foods shooting 2010

Cloning Has Terrible Trade-Offs

Plants that clone themselves to live for eons may be cheating death, but at a terrible price, say researchers who have studied seemingly immortal aspen trees in British Columbia. Like many other plants, an aspen can reproduce sexually or by growing clones of itself from lateral roots — sometimes creating large stands of trees of more than 100 acres that are essentially the same tree grown over and over again. Some aspens may have used this tactic to survive up to a million years, according to some estimates. But the longer an aspen depends on cloning to survive, the worse it is at sexual reproduction, says California State University, San Diego biologist Dilara Ally, who discovered this trade-off in male aspens while doing her doctoral work at the University of British Columbia. The advantages of reproducing by cloning are easy to spot — you can just keep spreading a genetically identical plant without expending the energy for flowers, seeds and getting the seeds dispersed. “They don't have to go to the trouble that we do (to reproduce),” explained Ally, whose paper on the matter, co-authored by Kermit Ritland and Sarah Otto, appears in this week's issue of the journal PLoS Biology. There are some big disadvantages to cloning as well, however. Perhaps the biggest disadvantage is mutations, or genetic errors, that gradually and steadily build up in the genetic material of the plants' cells. “The longer you clone yourself the more mutations you build up,” Ally explained. By counting the accumulated mutations of more than 700 trees belonging to 20 different male aspen clones via what are called genetic microsatellite markers, Ally and her colleagues were able to use them as a sort of clock to gauge the age of the original tree that started all the cloning. They then compared the ages of the clones to different measures of the trees' fertility. They found that long-lived aspen clones do indeed suffer reduced sexual fitness with age. In other words, even seemingly eternal trees like aspens are still subject to the harsh realities of natural selection, sooner or later. “Plants cannot escape,” said plant aging researcher Deborah Roach of the University of Virginia. “Selection can't create the perfect organism.” But the new study is also important in another way, Roach told Discovery News. “This is a big leap in terms of looking at whole organisms as opposed to the plant part,” said Roach. A lot of previous work focused on leaves, for instance, she said, rather than how an entire tree ages. Now aging in plants like aspens can be used as a model for other organisms, Roach said. added by: Almibry

Joan Rivers: ‘You Never Dwell on the Success’

Joan Rivers probably works harder in 2010 than every standup comic who ever called her groundbreaking. In the new documentary Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work , the legend repeatedly caws that she is no artifact. She’s riding creaky elevators down New York cellars and wisecracking to crowds. She’s on TV. She’s selling a stage show overseas. And she’s never satisfied with her 50 years of performing — there’s too much money to be made, too many opportunities to pounce upon, and too many disappointments to overcome. She is work. But as the film proves, she is also a scratchy sage who can articulate the thrills and pitfalls of ambition better than any of her colleagues in the mic-brandishing game. Movieline phoned the 77-year-old comic great yesterday to discuss the A Piece of Work , the flattery of Johnny Carson’s resentment, her favorite comedians, and the failures (including the suicide of her husband Edgar) she refuses to forget.

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Joan Rivers: ‘You Never Dwell on the Success’

Dr. Amy Bishop photo

Dr. Amy Bishop was indicted on a single count of first-degree murder on Wednesday, the Boston Globe reports, after a Norfolk County, Mass., grand jury was presented with a detailed review of that case. University professor Amy Bishop – charged after allegedly open fire on six of her colleagues and killing three, last February – is facing new charges that she also shot and killed her brother 24 years ago. Authorities in Massachusetts originally ruled the Dec. 6, 1986, death of Seth Bishop, 18,

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Dr. Amy Bishop photo

Miley Cyrus and Bret Michaels

For Bret Michaels– who has been touring steadily since his return to the stage in Biloxi on May 28 – it#39;s another step towards making sure his legacy is to be that he rocked. And Miley Cyrus will be happy for a chance to showcase new material from her new album Can#39;t Be Tamed, especially in the wake of outrage over an apparently explicit paparazzi shot of her posted by Perez Hilton. Bret Michaels will be taking a quick detour from his hectic touring schedule with Lynyrd Skynyrd – and no

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Miley Cyrus and Bret Michaels