

dopaminesurge said:I'll go first:
1. People with an orbitofrontal cortex lesion are less affected by dirty words than the general population.
During an fMRI, if you do language testing consisting of naming pictures, the same level of brain activation is observed on the images whether the patient says the name of the object aloud or simply thinks of the name silently. Consequently, we perform the testing with the patients thinking the name silently, since speaking results in head movements which produces movement artifacts in our images (our resolution is 1.5mm x 1.5mm x 4.5mm, so we can even detect motion from breathing).dopaminesurge said:I'll go first:
1. People with an orbitofrontal cortex lesion are less affected by dirty words than the general population.
That is so cool. I'm jealous!n3ur05ur930n said:Another fun fact: my avatar is an image of my actual brain (structural spgr) overlayed onto the bone structure of my head/face using the images acquired via MRI and a program called BrainVoyager.
n3ur05ur930n said:During an fMRI, if you do language testing consisting of naming pictures, the same level of brain activation is observed on the images whether the patient says the name of the object aloud or simply thinks of the name silently. Consequently, we perform the testing with the patients thinking the name silently, since speaking results in head movements which produces movement artifacts in our images (our resolution is 1.5mm x 1.5mm x 4.5mm, so we can even detect motion from breathing).
Another fun fact: my avatar is an image of my actual brain (structural spgr) overlayed onto the bone structure of my head/face using the images acquired via MRI and a program called BrainVoyager.
hahahahahaha.Triggity02 said:wash hands frequently after purifying oocysts from an infectious protozoan parasite that causes violent diarrheal disease.
n3ur05ur930n said:Another fun fact: my avatar is an image of my actual brain (structural spgr) overlayed onto the bone structure of my head/face using the images acquired via MRI and a program called BrainVoyager.
n3ur05ur930n said:During an fMRI, if you do language testing consisting of naming pictures, the same level of brain activation is observed on the images whether the patient says the name of the object aloud or simply thinks of the name silently. Consequently, we perform the testing with the patients thinking the name silently, since speaking results in head movements which produces movement artifacts in our images (our resolution is 1.5mm x 1.5mm x 4.5mm, so we can even detect motion from breathing).
Another fun fact: my avatar is an image of my actual brain (structural spgr) overlayed onto the bone structure of my head/face using the images acquired via MRI and a program called BrainVoyager.
Punkinhead said:Injecting live attenuated Herpes virus into mouse brains causes implanted glioblastoma multiforme tumors to shrink and sometimes disappear!
n3ur05ur930n said:During an fMRI, if you do language testing consisting of naming pictures, the same level of brain activation is observed on the images whether the patient says the name of the object aloud or simply thinks of the name silently. Consequently, we perform the testing with the patients thinking the name silently, since speaking results in head movements which produces movement artifacts in our images (our resolution is 1.5mm x 1.5mm x 4.5mm, so we can even detect motion from breathing).
Another fun fact: my avatar is an image of my actual brain (structural spgr) overlayed onto the bone structure of my head/face using the images acquired via MRI and a program called BrainVoyager.
This used to happen to a lot of kids who played catcher in little league baseball, right? And good pitch would come in and hit them in the chest and they would die, right? And by "a lot", I mean a handful.OrganLibrarian said:If someone knocks you with a strong force (such as in an elbowing incident) in the center of your chest, at a specific point in the cardiac cycle, you could fall over and die within seconds. This is not in my research - it's called commotio cordis, and it's creepy!
jebus said:This used to happen to a lot of kids who played catcher in little league baseball, right? And good pitch would come in and hit them in the chest and they would die, right? And by "a lot", I mean a handful.
No, no, no! You don't have to stop having fun! You just need a protective padding like a vest or... no, I'm not going to say it. It would be poor taste even by my (low) standards.OrganLibrarian said:I suppose it could happen that way. A recent incident I've heard of involved moshing. I guess I've gotta stop letting my hubby Cletus punch me when he's drunk.
dajimmers said:That is so cool. I'm jealous!
A call to action: Keep circumcising. Not because it has any health benefits, but because my lab gets fibroblasts to study from donated foreskin.
OrganLibrarian said:If someone knocks you with a strong force (such as in an elbowing incident) in the center of your chest, at a specific point in the cardiac cycle, you could fall over and die within seconds. This is not in my research - it's called commotio cordis, and it's creepy!
Thundrstorm said:And don't put dry ice down the sink. 👍
Depakote said:I love getting Material Safety Data Sheets about things that really don't need them.
I used to disect mouse uterine horns b/c I was working with embryonic cells.diosa428 said:I like to put it in the sink and pour water on it. I also like to put little pieces of it in eppendorf tubes and watch them explode. Yes, I am 5.
Interesting? For those of you who have never seen a mouse uterus, when a mouse is pregnant it looks like a sausage roll, with each bump being a separate embryo.
Thundrstorm said:I used to disect mouse uterine horns b/c I was working with embryonic cells.
Did you know that the morning after breeding mice, you can tell who successfully got it on because the female mice will have a vaginal protein plug in the morning? Interesting and disgusting all at once. I spent many a Saturday morning probing mouse vaginas (Friday night was date night in the mouse room).
Thundr "mouse gynecologist" storm.
Everytime I go into the lab I have to root around in the -80 freezer for a sample, and everytime I forget to put on gloves beforehand. If our freezer was organized it would be easy, because I would know where to look right away and not freeze my hand off, but this is not the case. Oh no - instead people just throw things in there, and I have to wipe ice off of tubes to figure out if I have the right one. I can only last about 30 seconds before my hands start to hurt and I have to run for gloves. 🙂 It's a dangerous game.LadyWolverine said:5) Don't put your hand in the -80 freezer or the liquid N2 without gloves. (Believe me on this one.)
SuzieQ3417 said:Everytime I go into the lab I have to root around in the -80 freezer for a sample, and everytime I forget to put on gloves beforehand. If our freezer was organized it would be easy, because I would know where to look right away and not freeze my hand off, but this is not the case. Oh no - instead people just throw things in there, and I have to wipe ice off of tubes to figure out if I have the right one. I can only last about 30 seconds before my hands start to hurt and I have to run for gloves. 🙂 It's a dangerous game.
BerkeleyMD said:Here's the motto from my lab:
"If we knew what it was we were doing, it would not be called research, would it?"
Albert Einstein
It's in our office and it makes me wonder what our patients are thinking when they see it.
LadyWolverine said:8) Mitochondrial DNA is really not all that interesting.
BaylorGuy said:Its also present in the dark side of the martial arts....more than likely though, they're are very few, if any, who know how to do this....if it even exists.
browniegirl86 said:Kill Bill 2: Five Point Palm Exploding Heart Technique
Ok, I know it's not the same, but it was the first thing I thought about when I read this.
Zymogen said:Are you working with Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)? We just talked about that in immunology. Pretty interesting. 👍