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Monday, 15 December 2014

Dubai Crashed, Qatar Crashed, And The Rest Of The Gulf States Got Smoked



Share prices in energy-rich Gulf Arab states fell sharply at the start of the week Sunday, dragged down after oil prices plunged to new lows.


The decline was across the board on almost all of the region's seven bourses, as investors went into a panic sell-off soon after trading kicked off.


Dubai's benchmark DFM Index lost 6.2 percent to 3,373.51 points, pulled down by market leader Emaar Properties, which shed 8.0 percent, and construction giant Arabtec, which lost 7.2 percent.


The index shed 7.2 percent on Thursday.


Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange recovered slightly at mid-session, trading down 3.6 percent at 4,212.07 points with energy stocks declining 5.3 percent and the real estate and banking sectors also falling.


The Saudi Tadawul All-Shares Index, the largest in the Arab world, dipped 3.3 percent to 8,113.22 points, a 12-month low.


dubai 3 monthBloomberg.comA disastrous last three months for the Dubai stock market.


Leading the decline was the petrochemicals sector, with Saudi Basic Industries Co. SABIC losing 5.6 percent.


The main index on the Qatar Exchange, the second biggest bourse in the Gulf, dived 7.2 percent to 10,959.0 points, a level last seen in early January. Market leaders in banking and industry contributed to the slide.


Kuwait Stock Exchange deepened losses, losing 3.2 percent to 6,254.62 points, a 22-month low, despite the listing of VIVA, a third mobile phone operator 26 percent-owned by Saudi Telecom.


The Muscat Securities Market lost 2.72 percent to 5,649.49 points, while the Bahrain bourse was unchanged.


Global oil prices tanked Friday to fresh five-year lows after a gloomy crude demand downgrade from the International Energy Agency (IEA) and more weak Chinese economic data.


US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for January delivery plunged to $58.80 per barrel -- the lowest level since May 20, 2009 -- having already closed under the psychological level of $60 on Thursday.


Brent crude for January meanwhile slipped to $62.75 in morning London deals, striking a low point last witnessed on July 16, 2009.


The oil market -- which has shed almost 50 percent since June -- plumbed the latest lows after the Paris-based IEA slashed its 2015 demand outlook, despite plunging prices.


The six nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council -- Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates -- depend heavily on oil revenues which make up around 90 percent of their total income.




Peru offended with Greenpeace's Nazca lines stunt

greenpeace nasca lines

© rt.com410 × 230

Greenpeace damages Nazca site.



Greenpeace is apologizing to the people of Peru after pulling a stunt at the site of the sacred Nazca lines. Government officials claim the action damaged the ancient markings.

Before dawn on Monday, 20 Greenpeace activists went to site of the historic Nazca lines and laid out massive yellow letters reading "Time for Change: The Future is Renewable." Currently, the United Nations is holding the Lima Climate Change Conference in the country, and the stunt was apparently intended to catch the attention of officials gathered there.


According to a press release on Greenpeace's website, the group meant for the message -- which can be seen from the sky -- "to honor the Nazca people, whose ancient geoglyphs are one of the historic landmarks of Peru. It is believed that one of the reasons for the Nazca's disappearance can be linked to massive regional climate change."


However, the government of Peru did not take it as an honor.


"It's a true slap in the face at everything Peruvians consider sacred," Deputy Culture Minister Luis Jaime Castillo told Associated Press.


nazca letters

© www.cnn.com

Greenpeace activists arranging letters of their message next to a famous hummingbird geoglyph



The Greenpeace activists entered a "strictly prohibited" area near the famed figure of a hummingbird, according to Associated Press. Entrance to this area is permitted only with authorization, and those who get approval must wear special footwear.

"They are absolutely fragile," the minister said of the geoglyphs. "They are black rocks on a white background. You walk there and the footprint is going to last hundreds or thousands of years. And the line that they have destroyed is the most visible and most recognized of all."


The Peruvian government plans to open a criminal investigation into the matter and is reportedly attempting to bar those who participated in the act from leaving the country, per Reuters. A charge of "attacking archeological monuments" carries a sentence of up to six years in prison.


A spokesperson for Greenpeace told that International Executive Director Kumi Naidoo is in Peru and plans to meet with authorities. The group is looking into the incident and "taking this very seriously."


Greenpeace apologized in a statement published to its website Thursday, saying:



Without reservation Greenpeace apologizes to the people of Peru for the offense caused by our recent activity laying a message of hope at the site of the historic Nazca Lines. We are deeply sorry for this.


We fully understand that this looks bad. Rather than relay an urgent message of hope and possibility to the leaders gathering at the Lima UN climate talks, we came across as careless and crass. We have now met with the Peruvian Culture Ministry responsible for the site to offer an apology.



The Nazca lines feature hundreds of straight lines and geometric figures, along with 70 animal and plant designs made by moving rocks and dirt to create a "negative" image, according to . While mystery still surrounds the site, the lines are believed to have been etched between 500 B.C. and A.D. 500, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Culture Organization. It was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1994.

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Mystery sea creature on Google Earth: Unexplained discovery in New Zealand's waters

Mystery wake

© Google Earth



A mystery sea creature seen on Google Earth is suspected to have caused an unexplained wake in New Zealand's ocean waters. reports that last week an unusual wake was seen at Oke Bay of the Bay of Islands located in the Far North District of the country's North Island.

Pita Witehira of Hamilton, New Zealand, found the interesting image on Google Earth while he was doing some holiday research. The unidentified creature is thought to be around 40-feet long, judging by the size of the wake.


Witehira rules out a boat causing the wake since white froth wasn't seen in the water. He has a different explanation for it.




"The Native Maori would call this a ('Troll') as it appears not to be a whale and it is far too big to be a shark. It is moving too fast and turning too sharply to be a whale."




The Google image was reportedly captured by satellite around 11:30 a.m. on January 30 of this year.

Witehira says he owns some property near Oke Bay, and says whatever created such a wake, there would have to be "a lot of weight under the water to create that kind of drag."


Oke Bay is a peaceful white sand beach with shallow water of about 130-feet-deep which suddenly drops into the bay. Witehira adds that abundant undergrowth is in the deeper sections of the bay.


According to , the intriguing discovery surfaces after a giant crab about 50-feet-wide allegedly lurked below shallow waters in England. The news emerged in October in the seaside town of Kent. Some believe it proves "Crabzilla" exists, while others think it's a sandbank shaped like a crab, or maybe it's some kind of hoax.


In a separate article, a woman found a mystery sea creature while walking on an Australian beach. It was a red blob that some joked was a whale placenta, but a spokesperson from Queensland Museum surmised it was a sea slug.


Is there really a large mystery creature in ocean waters not yet discovered? In May 2013, a mysterious sea monster's carcass washed ashore on New Zealand's Bay of Plenty. It had decomposed to the point of being unable to determine what it was at first. As reports, many thought it could have been a giant saltwater crocodile or a moray eel. A marine biologist eventually identified the mysterious sea creature as a decomposed orca whale. The whale's distinct flipper helped aid in the biologist's determination.


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Rat infestation worsens at One World Trade Center offices


The rodents have pestered the staffs of and . Conde told employees that they cannot eat at their desks and that a complaint will be made with the city's health department.

Conde Nast's rat problem is getting worse rather than better.


While Vanity Fair editor Graydon Carter tells Confidenti@l that rats stubbornly continue to occupy the new Conde Nast offices at One World Trade Center, we're also told that editor-in-chief Anna Wintour doesn't even want to go in the building anymore.


And while there were multiple previous reports that the pests were terrorizing the glamorous staff at , we're now told they've "taken over" more of the storied publishing house.



A bunch ate through the ceiling of a sports editor's office and crawled all over his desk and left poops on his keyboard," said a different source. "They ate through his rug to fit under his door."

We're told that Conde has sent a memo to their staff in the building telling them that "they cannot eat at their desks" and that a complaint to the city's health department is next on the agenda.


When we bumped into Carter outside the tower, where the publishing house set up shop in November, we asked him if the little beasts are disgusting as we've heard. "They're rats!" laughed the legendary editor, "What do you think?"


The Durst Organization, which manages One World Trade Center for the Port Authority, declined to comment.


Reps for Conde Nast did not respond to requests for comment.


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Walking: The incredible benefits of humankind's most basic form of exercise


© hefitindian.com



Four reasons walking has become America's 'untrendiest trend.' Hint: It's not just health.

Walking is going places.


Humans' most common pastime - forsaken for decades as too slow and too much effort - is now recognized as a health breakthrough, an economic catalyst and a route to happiness.


Real Simple magazine (circulation: 2 million) declared "walking America's untrendiest trend" in its February 2014 cover story. A month later Builder magazine (a construction trade journal) announced on its cover, "Walkability. Why we care...and why you should too." The reason? Simple: "Increasingly, the market is demanding places where homeowners can hoof it."


The New Yorker weighed in last September quoting the new book A Philosophy of Walking, which asserts that walking "makes it possible to recover the pure sensation of being, to rediscover the simple joy of existing."


This sheer pleasure of walking is highlighted in one of the year's top music videos, "Happy" by soul singer Pharrell Williams. It's an exuberant celebration of life on foot showing all kinds of people (including Magic Johnson, Steve Carrell and Jimmy Kimmel) strutting, stepping, striding and sashaying down city streets. It's been viewed 465 million times on You Tube.


There is sure to be continuing coverage of foot power next year when the Surgeon General's office releases a Call to Action on the health and social benefits of walking and walkable communities - a step some are comparing to the 1964 Surgeon General's Report on the dangers of smoking.


Already the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends all adults engage in 30 minutes of physical activity such as walking five days a week based on the proven connection between moderate physical activity and lower incidences of major medical problems - not just heart disease, diabetes and obesity, as you'd expect, but also depression, dementia, anxiety, colon cancer, osteoporosis and other serious conditions.


This flurry of attention about walking is more than a flash-in-the-pan. Evidence that millions of Americans' are now rediscovering walking for transportation, fitness and fun is as solid as the sidewalk beneath our feet.


Americans Are Getting Back on their Feet


"Walking is the most common form of physical activity across incomes and ages and education levels," explained Thomas Schmid of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention at the Pro-Walk, Pro-Bike Pro-Place conference in Pittsburgh this fall. The CDC's most recent research shows the number of Americans who take a walk at least once a week rose from 56 percent in 2005 to 62 percent in 2010 - which represents almost 20 million more people on their feet.


Speaking on the same panel, Paul Herberling of the US Department of Transportation noted that 10.4 percent of all trips Americans make are on foot - and 28 percent of trips under a mile. For young people, it's 17 percent of percent of all trips. Americans walk most frequently for exercise, errands and recreation, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.


Last year the first-ever Walking Summit was held in Washington DC, drawing more than 400 people from 41 states and Canada representing 235 organizations ranging from the PGA Tour to the Sioux Falls (South Dakota) Department of Health. A second summit is scheduled for October 28-30, 2015 in Washington, DC.


The 2013 summit, which sold out weeks in an advance, marked the birth of a new walking movement committed to: 1) encouraging everyone to walk more; and 2) boosting policies, practices and investments that make communities everywhere more walkable. It was convened by the Every Body Walk! Collaborative, a joint effort of more than 100 influential organizations across many fields to promote walking as part of the solution to problems ranging from chronic disease and health care costs to climate change and the decline of community.


The Every Body Walk! Collaborative (EBWC), which was catalyzed by Kaiser Permanente includes major institutions like AARP, NAACP, the PTA and the American College of Sports Medicine as well as grassroots organizations . America Walks, a coalition of pedestrian advocacy groups, helps lead EBWC.


"In addition to the health benefits of getting regular physical activity, people's health can be correlated to having strong relationships, and living in connected communities with high levels of social cohesion," said Kaiser Permanente vice-president Tyler Norris at the Pro-Walk Pro-Bike Pro-Place conference. "Among the important determinants of this sense of belonging is 'Do I know my neighbors?' A walkable community fosters these connections every day by helping us meet people we otherwise wouldn't."


Americans overwhelmingly view walking as a good thing, according to a national survey from GfK Research sponsored by Kaiser Permanente. Here are some of benefits of walking shown in the survey:



  • Good for my health (94 percent)

  • Good way to lose weight (91 percent)

  • Great way to relax (89 percent)

  • Helps reduce anxiety (87 percent)

  • Reduces feelings of depression (85 percent)




Americans Are Voting With Their Feet

Even the American dream is being remodeled to meet the public's growing enthusiasm for walking. Sixty percent of Americans would prefer to live in a neighborhood with stores and services within easy walking distance, according to a recent survey from the National Association of Realtors, nearly twice as many who want to live where stores can be reached only by car.


This is especially true for the millennial generation, who are now entering the workforce and housing market in large numbers. "With drastically different views of transportation from those of generations that came before them, millennials are transforming communities," notes another report from the National Association of Realtors...." Millennials own fewer cars and drive less than their predecessors. They'd rather walk, bike, car-share and use public transportation--and want to live where that's all easy."


Why Walking? Why Now?


What's driving the growing passion for walking? "It's a convergence of factors", says Christopher Leinberger, a real estate developer, George Washington University business professor and a leading advocate that walkable communities are crucial to our future prosperity:


1. The well-established link between walking and better health, which is reinforced by recent research pointing to the dangers of sitting for long periods. A comprehensive study charting 240,000 Americans between ages 50 and 71 published in the Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that "overall [time] sitting was associated with all-cause mortality".


2. The accelerating costs of owning one, two or more cars, which many Americans, especially younger people, find a poor investment of their resources. Transportation is now the highest cost in family budgets (19 percent) next to housing (32 percent). In auto-dependent communities - where walking is inconvenient and unsafe - transportation costs (25 percent) approach housing costs (32 percent).


3. Metropolitan areas with many walkable neighborhoods do better economically than those with just a few. Leinberger's recent report Foot Traffic Ahead finds that walkable metropolitan areas "have substantially higher GDPs per capita" as well as a higher percentage of college graduates. Office space in walkable locations enjoys a 74 percent rent-per-square-foot premium over offices in auto-oriented developments in America's 30 largest metropolitan regions.


4. More people discovering the personal satisfactions of walking. "Seeing friends on the street, walking to work, strolling out for dinner or nightlife," are among the pleasures of walking that enrich our lives, says Leinberger.


Walking Means Business


Firms in the booming tech, information and creative industries are at the forefront of the trend toward walkable communities because the coveted young talent they need to stay competitive in fast-changing fields want to work in places a short stroll from cafes and cultural attractions.


The first thing Google did after buying the electronics firm Motorola Mobility was to move its headquarters away from the freeways and strip malls of Libertyville, Illinois to the walkable environs of downtown Chicago. "They felt like they couldn't attract the young software engineers they needed" to an isolated 84-acre complex, says Leinberger. Other companies that recently moved from suburban Chicago to the city include Medline, Walgreen's, Gogo, GE Transportation, Hillshire Brands and Motorola Solutions.


"Two things seem to resonating for businesses about the importance of walkability -how to attract the best workforce and wanting to locate in communities where health costs are lower," says Mark Fenton, a former US National Team race walker who now consults on public health planning and transportation. Employees with more opportunities to walk at work and at home are healthier, meaning lower insurance rates for their firms.


From his vantage point at the CDC, Thomas Schmid observes, "If a business is located in a community that is not healthy, they're paying more to be there. Think of it as a tax or cost of doing business because of health care costs." One company relocating to Chattanooga, he said, would do so only if a walking and bike trail was extended to their facility.


The Challenges to a More Walkable America


The walking movement has picked up a lot of momentum in a very short time. "The wind is behind our sails," says Kate Kraft, a public health expert working with EBWC and America Walks. But she goes on to note that "it took 80 years to make America unwalkable, and it will take a lot of work to make it walkable again".


Last year's national survey on Americans' attitudes to walking accentuates these challenges. By a huge majority, people say that walking is good for them but also admit that they should walk more (79 percent) and that their children should walk more (73 percent). Only 11 percent say they meet the CDC's recommended daily minimum for walking - half an hour a day five days a week.


Common reasons cited for not walking are:



  • My neighborhood is not very walkable (40 percent)

  • Few places within walking distance of my home (40 percent)

  • Don't have time (39 percent)

  • Speeding traffic or lack of sidewalks (25 percent)

  • Crime in my neighborhood (13 percent)


Solutions for a More Walkable America

Here are some of the promising developments, strategies, messages and tools that are now emerging to promote walking:


Vision Zero for Safe Streets: 4500 Americans are killed crossing the street every year, a tragedy that few people acknowledge. But there's hope that will change now that New York City, San Francisco, Oregon and other places are implementing Vision Zero campaigns to reduce traffic deaths through street improvements, law enforcement and public education. Similar policies in Sweden cut pedestrian deaths in half over the past five years and reduced overall traffic fatalities at the same rate. "Vision Zero is the next big thinking for walking," says Alliance for Biking & Walking president Jeff Miller.


Federal Action Plan on Pedestrian Safety: New US Secretary of Transportation Anthony Foxx recently announced an all-out effort to apply the department's resources to boost bike and pedestrians safety the same as they do auto and airline safety. Secretary Foxx, former mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina, notes that pedestrian deaths rose 6 percent since 2009. One thrust of his Action Plan on Bike and Pedestrian Safety "Bicycling and walking is as important as any other form of transportation," he says.


Safe Routes to Schools: Half of kids under 14 walked or biked to school in 1969. Now it's less than 15 percent. Safe Routes to School campaigns work with families, schools and community officials to identify and eliminate barriers that block kids from getting to school under their own power. "We're finding that the best interventions include both infrastructure improvements and programming. You put the sidewalks in but also get parents involved," explains Margo Pedroso, deputy director of the Safe Routes to Schools National Partnership.


Walking as a Basic Human Right: Walking has been shown to optimize our health and strengthen our communities, which means everyone should have equal opportunity to do it. But low-income people often find it difficult or dangerous to take a walk in their neighborhoods, which often lack sidewalks and other basic infrastructure. Studies show that pedestrians in poor neighborhoods are up to four times more likely to be injured in traffic accidents.


Communities for People of All Ages: The mark of a great community is whether you'd feel calm about letting your 80-year-old grandmother or 8-year-old son walk to a nearby park or business district, says Gil Penalosa, former park director of Bogota, explaining why he founded 8-80 Cities. Too many young and old people today live under virtual house arrest, unable to get anywhere on their own because driving is the only way to go.


Complete Streets: The simple idea that all streets should offer safe, convenient and comfortable travel for everyone - those on foot, on bike, on transit, in wheelchairs, young, old or disabled. Twenty seven states and 625 local communities across the US have adopted Complete Streets policies in some form.


The Healing Properties of Nature and the Outdoors: Not all exercise offers the same health benefits, according to a growing body of research showing that outdoor physical activity, especially in nature, boosts our health, improves our concentration and may speed up our natural healing process. A walk in the park is not only more interesting than a work-out at the gym, it may be more healthy too. The Wingspread Declaration - recently signed by 30 of America's leading health officials, researchers and non-profit leaders - calls for business, government and the health care sector to step up efforts to reconnect people with nature.


Walking as a Medical Vital Sign: There's an initiative afoot to encourage health care professionals to chart patients' physical activity the same as they do weight, blood pressure, smoking and family health.


Walk With a Doc: Walking has the lowest drop-out rate of any physical activity, which is why Ohio cardiologist David Sabgir started Walk With a Doc: to sponsor events where people can talk to health care professional while outwalking. Walk With a Doc now operates in 38 states.


Signs of the Times: Many people are so out of practice on walking, they don't realize how convenient it is. That's why architecture student Matt Tamasulo posted signs in Raleigh, North Carolina explaining that key destinations were only a few minutes away by foot. The city soon embraced his guerrilla campaign, and official walk wayfinding signs are found around town. Tamasulo has launched Walk [Your City] to help other communities show how easy it is to get around on your own power.


Walking is Fun: "Walking is still not seen to be as sexy as biking," says Robert Ping, program manager for Walking and Livable Communities Institute. "We could focus more on walking as recreation-- the stroll through the neighborhood after dinner, going around the block, walking down to the park, meeting your neighbors. Something that's not only utilitarian and good for the environment, but that's fun!"


About the author


Jay Walljasper writes, speaks, edits and consults about creating stronger, more vital communities. He is author of The Great Neighborhood Book and All That We Share: A Field Guide to the Commons. His website: JayWalljasper.com.


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Gunman barricaded in Philadelphia home after shooting five people


A suspect in five killings barricaded himself inside a suburban Philadelphia home on Monday morning, several local media outlets reported.

Police had discovered the bodies of five people in three separate locations, WPVI television and other media reported.


The suspect, believed to be a military veteran, was holed up in a home in Souderton, Pennsylvania, about 35 miles north of Philadelphia, WPVI reported.


A shooting was first reported at about 4:00 a.m. EST in Lower Salford, where police found a woman shot to death, local media reported.


Police responded to a second call about half an hour later to find two other people shot and killed in Lansdale. Two further people were found dead in Souderton.


Local police in Souderton, Lower Salford and Lansdale said they could not immediately confirm the shootings or status of the suspect. All three towns are Philadelphia suburbs.


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Neuronal circuits filter out distractions in the brain

neural connections

© Bo Li, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory scientists have identified neural connections between the cortex, thalamus, and TRN (TRN neurons shown in red, left and right panels) that help filter out distractions. Loss of a single protein in the TRN (shown here in green, middle and right panels) dramatically affects the function of the neural circuit and changes how mice focus.



The next time you are in a crowded room, or a meeting, or even at the park with your kids, take a look around. How many people are on their phone? Distractions invade every aspect of our lives. Status updates, text messages, email notifications all threaten to steal our attention away from the moment. While we fight the urge to check the phone, our brains are making constant judgment calls about where to focus attention. The brain must continually filter important information from irrelevant interference.

Scientists have hypothesized for decades about how the brain might accomplish this, but it has been challenging to find evidence to support the theories. Now, researchers at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (CSHL) have identified a neural circuit in the mouse brain that controls attention and sensory processing, providing insight into how the brain filters out distractions. The work has implications for devastating psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia that are characterized at least in part by significant attention deficits.


The cortex is the region of the brain where most cognitive function happens. It is there that information is processed and interpreted, and decisions are made. But sensory information must pass through a neuronal gate, called the thalamus, on its way to the cortex. The thalamus, a ball-shaped bundle of neurons, is coated in a thin neuronal skin called the thalamic reticular nucleus, or TRN. As early as 1984, Nobel laureate Francis Crick hypothesized that the TRN might function like a guardian of the gate, regulating precisely which information is worthy of being passed on through the thalamus to the cortex for further analysis.


Researchers were intrigued by the hypothesis but faced technical struggles to prove that it was correct. Given the unique anatomical structure of the TRN - analogous to the skin on an apple - scientists were unable to target those neurons specifically. Still, evidence began to mount that the theory could be correct. Dysfunction of the TRN has been implicated in schizophrenia, and activity in the TRN correlates with sensory detection and attention.


Now, nearly 30 years after Crick's hypothesis, a team of CSHL scientists led by Associate Professor Bo Li has been able to provide the elusive evidence that the TRN regulates signaling between the cortex and thalamus. Together, the three structures form a circuit that controls attention and sensory processing in the mouse brain.


Using new viral technology combined with mouse models developed by CSHL Professor Josh Huang, Li and his team found a way to precisely target the TRN. They inactivated a single protein, called ErbB4, specifically in the TRN. Mutations in ErbB4 have been associated in prior studies with schizophrenia and other attention deficit disorders. The protein is found in large amounts in the TRN.


The team found that loss of ErbB4 in the TRN greatly affects the animal's ability to focus amid distractions. "When ErbB4 is absent, we saw that the connections between the cortex and the TRN become much stronger," explains Li. "This perturbs the role of the TRN as a guardian of the thalamus 'gate,' and provides a mechanism for the hypothesis that Crick proposed so long ago."


Beyond offering new insights into the neuronal basis of attention, the research suggests possible targets for therapeutics to treat attention deficit disorders as well as attention problems in broader illnesses including schizophrenia. According to Li, the next step is "to understand how loss of ErbB4 enhances the connections between the cortex and the TRN, which will hopefully enable us to pinpoint more drug targets in the future."


More information: "ErbB4 regulation of a thalamic reticular nucleus circuit for sensory selection" appears online in on December 15, 2014: doi


Journal reference: Nature Neuroscience


Provided by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory


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