Wednesday, July 3, 2013

John Ubaldo's Bloomberg TV Interview about GMOs

John Boy Ubaldo is the farmer from Cambridge NY, from whom we purchase our pork, beef, and this summer we are participating in his CSA. In a CSA we get a box of vegetables and fruits from him each week. John raises hormone, antibiotic and GMO free Berkshire pigs and Black Angus cattle. Here he is talking about why we should insist on labeling of GMO products.


Monday, April 29, 2013

May Britt and Edvard Moser Explore the Brain’s GPS


Right Time and Place: May Britt and Edvard Moser Explore the Brain’s GPS



            This article describes the discovery of grid cells in rat brains. These cells are a kind of built-in navigation system that is at the very heart of how animals know where they are, where they are going and where they have been. May Britt and Edvard Moser, spearheading this research, have shown that this special function occurs in the entorhinal cortex, which is at the back base of the brain. They noticed cells that would emit a signal every time a rat went to a particular spot, and they soon learned that the cells tracked the rat’s movement in the same way, no matter where the rat was. The cell was not responding to some external mark, but keeping track of how the rat moved. These cells would then inform place cells in the hippocampus (through an unknown mechanism), which sends the signal back with precise location information. Britt and Moser found that a very regular pattern emerged- the grid cells fired in a hexagonal formation in specific areas, creating a “grid” like a checkerboard (see picture below).
            This research can be the basis of several scientific developments to come. It has been hypothesized that the way the grid cells record and remember movement in space may be the basis of all memory. This can have huge implications for the way we learn and study in school. It is also known that the area in the brain that contains the grid cell navigation system is often damaged early in Alzheimer’s disease, and one of the frequent early symptoms of Alzheimer’s patients is that they get lost. These findings perhaps can help develop new treatments for Alzheimer’s in the future.
            
             I believe that the author did a mediocre good job explaining the treatment and its implications. 

He went a lot into the personal life of the researchers and how they came about the research project, 

and a lot more unimportant information. At times, his progression of ideas was confusing as well. He 

didn’t do a good job explaining what the research found either. It wasn’t very well organized, well 

written, or informative. The picture contains more information in a few sentences than the entire article 

encompasses. 





Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Summer STEM Program at Manhattan College School of Engineering

This sounds like an interesting opportunity for Sophomore and Junior students, who are interested in Engineering. Deadline for the application is May 15. See your science teacher for the application or download it from here.


Manhattan College Summer Engineering Prog-04162013 by Charles Ippolito

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Science Seminar April 3

Science Seminar Series
Presents
Naomi Schwartz
Doctoral student, Columbia University


Understanding the causes and effects
 of fire in the Peruvian Amazon
In recent years, wildfire activity has increased across the Amazon. In the past, fire was very rare there, so these changes could have big effects on biodiversity, ecosystems, and the carbon cycle. Most fires in the Amazon are started by people, either intentionally, through the use of fire for land management, or accidentally. Especially during drought years these fires can burn out of control into nearby forests. Naomi Schwartz is a Ph.D. student in ecology, evolution, and environmental biology at Columbia University. Her work uses a combination of ground and satellite measurements to understand the causes and effects of these fires in the Peruvian Amazon. She is especially interested in understanding the relationships between human activities and fire occurrence, and the effects of fire on secondary forests.
Wednesday, April 3
7 pm
Bronxville High School Auditorium

Monday, March 18, 2013

Freezing Point Depression Analysis Lab Investigation

The Chem II students use differences in freezing point depression of three unknown water solutions A, B and C to determine which of the solutions contain sodium chloride, calcium chloride, and sucrose as the solute, in this lab exercise presented by Mr. Nowak.  Once that is determined they will be able to calculate the molality of each solution from the data they collected. The students do know that each solution has the same concentration.

James and Bailie use temperature probes to determine the temperature of three unknown solutions as they approach their freezing points, as Matthew and Jordan look on.

Kenny and Max look on as Mr. Nowak checks their set up.
Alina, Malika and Tatiana decided to use three separate ice baths to bring their solutions down to their freezing points, as Professor Maitland observes their technique during her classroom visit.

The Labques2t Tablet indicates each of the three probes using a different background color. The probes are showing the temperatures of the three solutions (A, B and C) as they approach their freezing points.