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Posted by: Magical Realist - Mar 12, 2026 08:51 PM - Forum: Biochemistry, Biology & Virology - No Replies

"A new study by physicists and neuroscientists from the University of Chicago, Harvard and Yale describes how connectivity among neurons comes about through general principles of networking and self-organization, rather than the biological features of an individual organism.

The research, published on January 17, 2024 in Nature Physics, accurately describes neuronal connectivity in a variety of model organisms and could apply to non-biological networks like social interactions as well.

“When you’re building simple models to explain biological data, you expect to get a good rough cut that fits some but not all scenarios,” said Stephanie Palmer, PhD, Associate Professor of Physics and Organismal Biology and Anatomy at UChicago and senior author of the paper. “You don’t expect it to work as well when you dig into the minutiae, but when we did that here, it ended up explaining things in a way that was really satisfying.”

Understanding how neurons connect

Neurons form an intricate web of connections between synapses to communicate and interact with each other. While the vast number of connections may seem random, networks of brain cells tend to be dominated by a small number of connections that are much stronger than most.

This “heavy-tailed” distribution of connections (so-called because of the way it looks when plotted on a graph) forms the backbone of circuitry that allows organisms to think, learn, communicate and move. Despite the importance of these strong connections, scientists were unsure if this heavy-tailed pattern arises because of biological processes specific to different organisms, or due to basic principles of network organization.

To answer these questions, Palmer and Christopher Lynn, PhD, Assistant Professor of Physics at Yale University, and Caroline Holmes, PhD, a postdoctoral researcher at Harvard University, analyzed connectomes, or maps of brain cell connections. The connectome data came from several different classic lab animals, including fruit flies, roundworms, marine worms and the mouse retina.

To understand how neurons form connections to one another, they developed a model based on Hebbian dynamics, a term coined by Canadian psychologist Donald Hebb in 1949 that essentially says, “neurons that fire together, wire together.” This means the more two neurons activate together, the stronger their connection becomes.

Across the board, the researchers found these Hebbian dynamics produce “heavy-tailed” connection strengths just like they saw in the different organisms. The results indicate that this kind of organization arises from general principles of networking, rather than something specific to the biology of fruit flies, mice, or worms.

The model also provided an unexpected explanation for another networking phenomenon called clustering, which describes the tendency of cells to link with other cells via connections they share. A good example of clustering occurs in social situations. If one person introduces a friend to a third person, those two people are more likely to become friends with them than if they met separately.

"These are mechanisms that everybody agrees are fundamentally going to happen in neuroscience,” Holmes said. “But we see here that if you treat the data carefully and quantitatively, it can give rise to all of these different effects in clustering and distributions, and then you see those things across all of these different organisms.”

Accounting for randomness

As Palmer pointed out, though, biology doesn’t always fit a neat and tidy explanation, and there is still plenty of randomness and noise involved in brain circuits. Neurons sometimes disconnect and rewire with each other — weak connections are pruned, and stronger connections can be formed elsewhere. This randomness provides a check on the kind of Hebbian organization the researchers found in this data, without which strong connections would grow to dominate the network.

The researchers tweaked their model to account for randomness, which improved its accuracy.

“Without that noise aspect, the model would fail,” Lynn said. “It wouldn’t produce anything that worked, which was surprising to us. It turns out you actually need to balance the Hebbian snowball effect with the randomness to get everything to look like real brains.”

Since these rules arise from general networking principles, the team hopes they can extend this work beyond the brain.

“That’s another cool aspect of this work: the way the science got done,” Palmer said. “The folks on this team have a huge diversity of knowledge, from theoretical physics and big data analysis to biochemical and evolutionary networks. We were focused on the brain here, but now we can talk about other types of networks in future work.”

The study, “Heavy–tailed neuronal connectivity arises from Hebbian self–organization,” was supported by the National Science Foundation, through the Center for the Physics of Biological Function (PHY–1734030) and a Graduate Research Fellowship (C.M.H.); by the James S. McDonnell Foundation through a Postdoctoral Fellowship Award (C.W.L.); and by the National Institutes of Health BRAIN initiative (R01EB026943)."

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Posted by: Magical Realist - Mar 12, 2026 01:11 AM - Forum: Weird & Beyond - Replies (2)

The UFO community is in an uproar. Walks out into the desert from his home near Albuquerque without his watch or cellphone and disappears. Missing for two weeks now. The FBI is handling the case. And if anyone knows about a secret UAP recovery program with the military, he definitely would! Very suspicious!

"During his tenure in the Air Force, McCasland oversaw classified space weapons programs and was head of research at Wright Patterson Air Force Base near Dayton, Ohio, Coulthart notes. That facility has long been rumored to house fragments of extraterrestrial debris from Roswell, N.M."

https://www.newsnationnow.com/missing/mc...n-ufo-uap/

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Posted by: C C - Mar 11, 2026 10:53 PM - Forum: Zymology - No Replies

PREVIOUS INSTALLMENT: Recurve bow review - White Feather "Catan"



SURVIVAL LILLY
https://youtu.be/NTGF3H7xD-g

VIDEO EXCERPTS: Russia is diverting liquefied natural gas from Europe to Asia. So now we will get even less LNG gas from Russia. Russia is increasing pressure on Europe in light of rising gas prices due to the war with Iran. [...] The war in the Middle East is putting massive pressure on global energy markets. On Monday morning, the price of oil temporarily surged by 30%.

Also, Zelenskyy has threatened Viktor Orbán with Ukrainian soldiers. The dispute over an EU loan and a damaged oil pipeline is escalating. Zelenskyy sends a stark warning to Hungarian Prime Minister Orban. Budapest reacts.

The backstory to this was that the Friendship Pipeline got damaged, and Slovakia and Hungary depend highly on this pipeline because most of the oil comes from this pipeline. Also, Hungary believes that the pipeline is actually not damaged, but the oil supply is held for political reasons, and therefore Hungary has the plan to use their veto to block a 90 billion loan to Ukraine. After this, Zelenskyy threatened the Hungarian prime minister.

[...] Then also, some Europeans were stuck in other countries -- Asian countries. They could not get back. One family from France wanted to return to Europe from Thailand. They were asked for €11,000 for the flight. So if you are stuck in such a country, which is affected directly or indirectly, it can cost you a lot of money to get home again. Many airlines are currently avoiding stopovers in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. So that's why you always want to have some extra money in case you have to stay an extra month in a foreign country.

[...] The escalation in the Middle East is causing oil prices to rise sharply with unforeseeable consequences for the global economy. Germany could once again be among the biggest losers. Europeans prepare a naval mission. Tankers are to be escorted through the Strait of Hormuz. That's the plan of French President Macron.

Also, now politicians admit that maybe shutting off so many nuclear power plants was not the best idea. [...] So now at the nuclear energy summit in France, the EU has announced that they will provide risk guarantees for private investors in new nuclear technologies. And of course this will be financed by the taxpayers money, right? The funds for this will come from our emission taxation system. So you pay now with your CO2 tax that nuclear power will be reinvented and rebuilt in Germany. Yeah...

This is it for Europe ... https://youtu.be/NTGF3H7xD-g

https://www.youtube-nocookie.com/embed/NTGF3H7xD-g

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Posted by: C C - Mar 11, 2026 05:07 PM - Forum: Alternative Theories - Replies (1)

U.S. military tested device that may be tied to Havana Syndrome on rats, sheep, confidential sources say
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/us-military...ranscript/

EXCERPTS: Microwaves are a range of frequences in the electromagnetic spectrum. Various microwave frequencies are generated by your oven, radar systems, TV transmitters. Even your phone, WiFi and Bluetooth use microwaves. Dr. David Relman told us his investigations found that one country had done a great deal of research on creating something different: a unique pattern of microwaves that can damage the brain.

Dr. David Relman: In both of our investigations we found the large majority of work to have been conducted in the former Soviet Union. And what they found was that effects could range from loss of consciousness to seizures to memory lapses, inability to concentrate, headaches, intense pressure, pain, disorientation, difficulty with balance, many of the things that we heard about from victims of Havana Syndrome.

[...] 60 Minutes has learned details of a classified microwave weapon that may explain mysterious brain injuries suffered by U.S. officials. We've been investigating these injuries for nine years. And now, our sources tell us this microwave weapon is portable, concealable and uses relatively little power.

Hundreds of possible attacks have been reported including, we've learned, at CIA headquarters in Virginia and at least two incidents on the grounds of the White House. For years, the government doubted the stories of the injured. But now the victims, including former CIA officer Marc Polymeropoulos, hope that word of a newly discovered weapon will finally vindicate them.

[...] Our confidential sources tell us the still classified weapon has been tested in a U.S. military lab for more than a year. Tests on rats and sheep show injuries consistent with those seen in humans. Also, as a separate part of the investigation, security camera videos have been collected that show Americans being hit. The videos are classified but they were described to us.

In one, a camera in a restaurant in Istanbul captured two FBI agents on vacation sitting at a table with their families. A man with a backpack walks in and suddenly everyone at the table grabs their head as if in pain. Our sources say another video comes from a stairwell in the U.S. embassy in Vienna. The stairs lead to a secure facility. In the video, two people on the stairs suddenly collapse.

Those videos and the weapon were among the reasons the Biden administration summoned about half a dozen victims to the White House with about two months left in the president's term... (MORE - missing details)

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Posted by: C C - Mar 11, 2026 05:01 PM - Forum: Fitness & Mental Health - No Replies

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1119520

INTRO: Medical debt is associated with deferred dental care, medical care, and mental health care, even among people with health insurance, according to a new study led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

The study found that 42.3% of people with medical debt delayed dental care compared with 17.7% of those without—almost 2.4 times as many; 23.0% of people with medical debt delayed medical care compared with just 5.3% of those without—about 4.3 times as many; and 14% of people with medical debt delayed mental health care compared with 5% of those without—nearly three times as many.

Uninsured adults were more likely to defer medical care when experiencing medical debt compared to those covered by commercial insurance—coverage provided by private non-government companies. More than 19% of uninsured adults, 13% of adults with Medicaid, 9% of adults with commercial insurance, and 8% of adults with Medicare reported medical debt. The share of deferred care for both mental health and dental needs was comparable among those who are insured and uninsured.

This study adds to a growing body of research that shows that people facing financial barriers to care experience poorer physical and mental health, higher mortality rates, and increased utilization of high-cost resources that could have been averted with preventive and routine care. However, previous research has not compared which types of care are most often deferred by people experiencing medical debt.

This study was published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine on March 10... (MORE - details, no ads)

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Posted by: C C - Mar 11, 2026 05:00 PM - Forum: Anthropology & Psychology - No Replies

https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1119177

INTRO:  Smoking cannabis can do more than blur memories. It can reshape them. A new Washington State University study found that people who consumed THC were more likely to recall words that were never presented and struggled with everyday tasks such as remembering to do something later.

Published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, the study is one of the most comprehensive looks yet at how cannabis affects memory. The findings suggest cannabis can impair not only simple recall, such as remembering a list of words, but also forms of memory people rely on in daily life, like remembering appointments, keeping track of conversations, or recalling where information came from.

Researchers were also surprised to find no meaningful differences between participants who consumed 20 milligrams of THC and those who consumed 40 milligrams, suggesting even moderate doses may cause substantial disruptions.

“Most previous studies have only looked at one or two types of memory, like recalling lists of words,” said Carrie Cuttler, senior author of the study and an associate professor of psychology at WSU. “This is the first study to comprehensively examine many different memory systems at once, and what we found is that acute cannabis intoxication appears to broadly disrupt most of them.” (MORE - details, no ads)

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Posted by: C C - Mar 11, 2026 04:56 PM - Forum: General Science - No Replies

https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/...ontrarian/

KEY POINTS: Whenever a scientific consensus forms around an idea, it’s because the overwhelming majority of scientists working in the field, based on the strength of the evidence, have come to accept it as foundational. However, an essential part of science is challenging conventionally accepted wisdom, and that includes challenging whatever the current consensus is, and exploring alternatives. Challenges to the scientific consensus are numerous and frequent, coming from experts, armchair experts, and amateurs alike. However, there’s a right way and a wrong way to do it; here’s what separates the two. (MORE - details)

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