How Enlightened! China takes homosexuality off list of mental illnesses. “In a reversal of previous policy, psychiatrists have decided to stop
classifying homosexuality as a mental disease.

New guidelines to be issued next month by the Chinese Psychiatric
Association will drop all references to homosexuality as a pathological
condition…” Sydney Morning Herald

A Machine Called Z: “Under a ring of water in a sealed chamber in the
middle of the New Mexico desert lies the heart of a
machine that could change the world.” Guardian [thanks, Abby]

The Swoosh Stumbles: “Why is it so tough to find a pair of Air Force Ones?” The software system to zip the right shoes into the right stores, for which Nike plunked down millions, doesn’t work. One casualty has been Nike’s stock price, of little interest to me. The Industry Standard But shoe stampedes closed several malls around the country (here’s a report from the March 4th Sacramento Bee), in this age of consumerist depravity, when queued customers — some of whom had been camped out since 3:00 a.m. — were unable to get their $140 pair of newly-launched hot shoes in the right color. “I’ve never seen anything this crazy before. It’s not worth it. I’m happy I got them, but they shouldn’t be limited. Everyone should be able to have a
pair. My little nephew almost got run over, and some guys went diving over the counter and hurt the girl at the
cash register. That was uncalled for.”

Similar stampedes have occurred recently in Oakland and Cincinnati. And two months ago in New York, a
Brooklyn Foot Locker manager allegedly set fire to his store to cover up the fact that 446 pairs of new Nike Air
Jordan sneakers were missing from his inventory. The $125 shoes were not scheduled to be released until later
that month, but the manager had been peddling them from a shop three doors down the street, authorities said.

The Retro style Air Jordans that caused such a frenzy Saturday are selling for more than $200 on eBay; chat
rooms on the Internet are devoted to when and where the latest styles will arrive.

This in the face of a recent New Scientist report on how innately human it is to cooperate while waiting in line [not on the web, I think].

“Oh, Calm Down!” James Fallows: “Some economic downturns are worse than others. This is one of the good ones.” We’re not experiencing negative growth. A downturn won’t negate “an astonishing period of material progress.” The deep forces affecting the economy remain positive, not negative. And the layoffs have hit people best positioned to adapt to them. The Industry Standard

Ten Ways to Make Windows 98 Run Better. Bought that faster Windows machine but still unsatisfied with your processing performance? It’s likely that, unless you’re a dedicated tweaker who’s done all these things already, the culprit is the operating system, and that you’ll find at least one or two helpful hints in this story. Since it’s just a modified Win 98, the tips are useful for WinME as well.

Korn, Radice and Hawes’ Cannibal: The History of the People-Eaters reviewed:

I once met an academic who was convinced that
there never had been any genuine cannibalism,
anywhere, ever.

All such stories
were a racist,
imperialist
construction of the
“other”, she
explained. She’d
had to have been
put in a pot and
boiled till she was
done to convince
her otherwise.
Such disbelievers
are now in retreat,
the authors of this
television spin-off
say.

Indeed, they propose that “cannibalism as a
feature of human behaviour is something that
has taken place throughout history, in every
continent on our planet”. Eating people is
commendably multicultural, then.
Thisislondon

Star thinkers in ‘e-learning’ launch: Filmed lectures by twelve of the “world’s greatest thinkers” will be available to the public for a month before they become the foundation of a growing archive which universities will pay a fee to access, at Boxmind.com, which is apologetic about the need to charge money for the service. Licensees will also be able to record and archive their own faculties’ lectures in the same innovative format, which its founder describes as “the Internet library students have dreamed of”:

Because the lectures are not delivered by a live webcast
but by a broadcast of filmed material, users can stop the action
at any point and follow the extensive links on each page for
in-depth background information on specific points. The lectures
can also be rewound and examined line by line for weaknesses
in the argument.

The technology used for the site – www.boxmind.com – is as
inventive as the concept. Each lecture screen is split into four. In
the top left, a talking head delivers the lecture, while
synchronised slides run in the top right. In the bottom right there
is a synchronised transcript of the entire lecture – complete with
embedded footnotes – next to the relevant web links.

The initial twelve lecturers in the series, accessible here, are:

  • Richard Dawkins,
    Fellow of New College, Oxford, and Charles Simonyi, professor
    of the public understanding of science. Survival of
    the Fittest – the Fittest What?
  • Niall Ferguson,
    Professor of political and financial history, at Oxford. The Cash Nexus – Money and Power in the Modern World
  • Sir Martin Rees,
    Astronomer Royal and Royal Society professor at Kings
    College, Cambridge. Cosmic Evolution
  • Daniel Dennett,
    Professor of philosophy, and director of the Center for Cognitive
    Studies at Tufts University, Massachusetts.
    Consciousness: More Like Fame Than Television
  • Peter Atkins,
    SmithKline Beecham fellow and tutor in physical chemistry at
    Lincoln College, Oxford. The Second Law
  • John Kay,
    Fellow of St John’s College, Oxford, and visiting professor of
    economics at the London School of Economics.
    The Foundations of Corporate Success
  • David Womersley,
    Fellow and tutor in English literature and senior tutor of Jesus
    College, Oxford. Tragedy and Individuality in
    Othello
  • John Searle,
    Mills professor of the philosophy of mind and language,
    University of California at Berkeley.
    Consciousness, Free Will and the Brain
  • Sir David Weatherall,
    Regius professor of medicine at Oxford. The
    Human Genome Project and the Future of Medical Practice
  • Ian Stewart,
    Professor of mathematics at Warwick University.
    Order and Chaos in Mathematics and Nature
  • Nicola Lacey,
    Professor of criminal law at LSE. Criminal Law and
    Modern Society
  • Steven Pinker,
    Peter de Florez professor in the department of brain and
    cognitive sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of
    Technology. The Ingredients of Language
  • I am interested in trying out this format, which sounds on the surface as if it is a great way to utilize web capabilities for disseminating information rather than trying to sell anything. I do wonder how much bandwidth a home user will need to view these without it being a frustrating experience. The Guardian

    Some police see through killer’s lies. “Shown
    videotapes of an interrogation of a murder suspect speaking a language
    they didn’t understand, some British police officers consistently knew
    when the man was lying and when he was telling the truth. Other officers
    detected lies and truths about as well as if they had guessed, and some
    detected lies less often than if they had guessed, report Aldert Vrij and
    Samantha Mann, both psychologists at the University of Portsmouth in
    England.

    Their study, published in the March-April Applied Cognitive Psychology,
    assesses, for the first time, people’s ability to size up a highly motivated
    liar.” The study showed police officers a foreign videotape of a suspect denying a murder accusation during an interrogation; he later confessed to the crime. I’d be interested in interviews with the officers who could easily recognize a liar to see if they could articulate the nonverbal cues they use. Science News

    Promise-Breaker  – George W. Bush retracts his foreign policy campaign pledges: “… isn’t it a tad
    peculiar to shoot your mouth off about U.S. military readiness
    first, and then assign fact-finders to verify?” Slate

    Although I’m glad the upshot appears to be that there will not be a vast increase in military expenditure, I also appreciate someone’s pointing out that he campaigned in ignorance and/or dishonesty, taking nonviable positions to get elected by pandering to rightwing sentiment. And it’s worth noting that revising his position is less a matter of having “come to his senses” than a realpolitik recognition that an illegitimate and crippled administration presiding over a legislative branch and an electorate neatly split down the middle is (thankfully) not likely to accomplish anything sweeping. How he spins things in an ongoing attempt to save his hide in the face of this inherent ineptitude is likely to remain entertaining viewing for at least four years.

    Drug’s Effect on Brain Is Extensive, Study Finds

    Heavy users of
    methamphetamine …
    are doing more damage to their
    brains than scientists had thought, according to the first study that
    looked inside addicts’ brains nearly a year after they stopped using
    the drug.

    At least a quarter of a class of molecules that help people feel
    pleasure and reward were knocked out by methamphetamine, the
    study found. Some of the addicts’ brains resembled those of people
    with early and mild Parkinson’s disease. But the biggest surprise is
    that another brain region responsible for spatial perception and
    sensation, which has never before been linked to methamphetamine
    abuse, was hyperactive and showed signs of scarring. New York Times

    Despite Blocks, Napster Users Can Still Get Protected Files. ‘…the system for restricting access to files
    could only block files by a specific name; a misspelling, intentional
    or unintentional, could stump the blocking software. Thus a user
    looking for Metallica’s “Fade to Black” would not be able to get the
    song, while one typing in “Fade 2 Black” would turn up numerous
    entries…’ New York Times

    “The most dangerous psychiatrist in America”? A Critic Takes On Psychiatric Dogma, Loudly. Dr. Sally Satel, in magazine articles, op-ed pieces in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal and her Dec. 2000 book PC, M.D.: How Political Correctness is Corrupting Medicine, about which I previously blinked,

    describes well-known public health researchers as “indoctrinologists,” accusing them of
    promulgating a “social justice agenda” by focusing on racism and
    poverty rather than health education and disease- fighting
    strategies. She criticizes feminists for construing
    wife-battering as a symptom of a patriarchal society. She argues that psychiatry is being co-opted by a culture of
    “victimology,” which undermines personal responsibility and
    ultimately damages patients. Dr. Satel shares office suites with such conservative luminaries as
    Newt Gingrich, Jeane J. Kirkpatrick and Robert H. Bork in her tenure as a scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, and the Shrub sought her counsel on drug policy during his campaign and has reportedly invited her into his Administration. While, as a clinical psychiatrist, I find her views on increased personal responsibility among our patients and avoiding the medicalization of social ills superficially beguiling until you examine the public policy implications of voicing them loudly instead of patiently within our interactions with those we treat. New York Times

    Yes, Size Matters: Gene-tweaking British evolutionary biologist believes that the genes that control body size also control longevity, and smaller is better. The Times of London

    Australia Outlaws E-Mail Forwarding: ‘Outrageously strict Internet copyright laws which have just gone into
    effect throughout Australia make it illegal to forward an e-mail memo
    without the author’s permission, and could result in fines of $60,000
    or five years in the slam, according to a story by the Aussie Sunday
    Telegraph
    .

    “It’s quite possible that the forwarding of an e-mail could be a
    technical infringement of copyright,” an unnamed legal advisor to Oz
    Attorney General Daryl Williams told the paper.

    “E-mailing is a ‘communication’ under the Digital Agenda Act, and
    so is putting something up on a Web site,” the source added.

    This could rank as the world’s most copyright-friendly and
    common-sense-hostile piece of legislation yet devised.’ The Register

    After Three Strikes, Is La Niña Out? “La Niña-like conditions that have persisted in the
    Pacific Ocean for three years might finally subside
    this Fall. The change could pave the way for a weak
    El Niño — and a surge of hydroelectricity for
    power-starved California.” NASA

    isometric screenshots: “A series of drawings from an isometric perspective, in the style of a computer game. The subject of each drawing is the image, or
    images, that created a popular cultural event. Historical events (like the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at the Lorraine Motel)
    are used interchangeably with fictionalized events (like the picnic scene from The Sound of Music).” Click on each picture to seee the full 800×600 image, which the artist executed in Photoshop. Go to the FAQ for identifications of each picture you don’t recognize.

    Government’s 50 Greatest Endeavors: An Opinion Survey for the Brookings Institution: “…a project on
    what the federal government tried to do and what it achieved. The project began
    with a cataloging of major laws passed since World War II, followed by the
    grouping of these statutes by their objective, and the selection of the top 50
    endeavors for a national survey of historians and political scientists. The survey
    results identify government’s greatest achievements and failures taking success,
    difficulty and importance into account.” When was the last time you believed your government could achieve difficult, important objectives for the good of the country or the world?

    ‘Snuffy Smith’ cartoonist Fred Lasswell dies at 84.

    Snuffy Smith (above) and Aunt Sukey, by Fred Lasswell

    The picture is cribbed from the “vast repository of toonological knowledge”, Don Markstein’s Toonopedia.

    But Markstein’s site has neither hide nor hair of some of my favorites, Dan O’Neill‘s “Odd Bodkins” and the late Vaughn Bodé‘s Deadbone (“…a billion years ago, across the winter blue past, there is
    a ugly mountain standing in the cold afternoon wind. It is
    the first place to look for the roots of western sanity… “) etc.

    Data Accessory Musings: Handspring hopes to gain an “edge”. “The new device will have an all metal case, PalmOS 3.5, 8MB RAM, a
    lithium (ion or polymer are uncertain) battery, a detachable Springboard adaptor, and it will be the the lightest
    & thinnest Visor yet” … Especially if it comes with a color display, the combination of that and the expansion slot might make me abandon brand loyalty and upgrade from my invaluable Palm Vx, even with the rumors of a color version coming this spring. On the other hand, there’s the Kyocera Smartphone, which integrates a Palm organizer into a cellphone neatly; this has apparently just been spotted in Verizon stores. This degree of integration of my two most important data accessories is appealing. I’ve tried some wireless web access on my current cellphone but it’s a brain-dead process with the small screen size and crippled data entry via the twelve-number keypad; I cancelled web services on my cellular account after a trial month. Here’s a primer on short messaging service (SMS), the wireless instant-messaging technology that’s very popular with the European market and, apparently, especially with the young. I honestly can’t see this catching on with me, but it wouldn’t be the first time I’ve scoffed at geeky developments I later came to depend upon.I don’t even see any use to instant messaging on my wired desktop, like ICU or Yahoo’s instant messaging client. As the article describes it, this appeals mostly to the Britney Spears set. Here’s an article on using an instant messaging client with a connected Palm device. Then there’s the two-way paging world of the Blackberrys etc., which I haven’t even thought about. If not a dot.com executive, I hear I’d have to be a nightclubbing NBA star for that. Your next net appliance, however, is of course going to be your car…

    Update: From Robot Wisdom comes thsi pointer to Simson Garfinkel’s rave about the Handspring Visorphone PDA-cellphone combination in Salon.

    Convergences: The essayist writes, “In the late 1960’s, as a college junior, I drove John Fahey through
    Massachusetts for a week. He was playing a series of gigs
    from Williamstown to Wellesley. Well after midnight,
    somewhere on the Mass Pike, he began to ramble on about
    his music
    and the odd and often inappropriate places it had
    found a home. He told me that there were mental hospitals
    in Massachusetts where his music was played over
    loudspeakers as part of the therapeutic regime; psychiatrists
    had decided it had the power to soothe the more agitated
    patients.

    ‘I’m always amazed it doesn’t drive them to immediate
    suicide,’ he said, cackling.”

    “Don’t become a well-rounded person. Well rounded people are smooth and dull. Become a
    thoroughly spiky person. Grow spikes from every angle. Stick in their throats like a
    pufferfish.” — Bruce Sterling [via apathy] It turns out this was from a speech, “The Wonderful Power of Storytelling”, from the Computer Game Developers Conference in San Jose CA in March 1991.

    Who Hit Who? Apart from the grammar, there are problems with this piece I’ve seen linked to by others. The author, Robert Morningstar, a “computer systems and imaging specialist”, says he wrote this on behalf of the captain, crew and passengers of the USS Greenville “all of whom had the duty and the right to be there.” He goes to great lengths to assert that the sub and the US Navy could not possibly have been remiss in the incident, claiming that the Ehime Maru was not really an innocent fishing vessel but probably had stealth capability, was stalking the submarine for Japanese intelligence-gathering and R&D purposes, and that it hit the sub rather than vice versa. He uses “patriot” phraseology which identifies him with the radical right. (He says he’s written for the “American Friends and Patriots Network”; a web search on that comes up with nothing, but the “American Patriot Friends Network” [“we believe Patriots should rule America”] is there and clearly comes from militia territory on the political map.)

    Quinacrine Non-surgical Method of Voluntary Female Sterilization: “…already used by over 100,000 women with no reported deaths or life
    threatening complications.”

    “Delivered by a trained midwife or MD in any office, using a modified
    IUD inserter, a 252 mg dose of 7 tiny quinacrine pellets is placed at the
    fundus of the uterus. The pellets dissolve quickly. The fluid causes
    inflammation and then scarring at the opening of the fallopian tubes.
    This prevents further births. With two treatments a month apart, studies
    show low failure rates with no evidence of cancer. As the drug is
    off-patent, the cost of the pellets and inserter is under $5. Surgical
    sterilizations often cost well over $2000 in the United States.” However, the method has been banned in Vietnam, India and China after unfavorable publicity, including suggestions of carcinogenicity, its proponents call a “vast disinformation
    campaign by uninformed feminists and traditional family planning
    opponents (which) has now been fully discredited by sound scientific
    investigations and a long favorable experience with QS in Chile.” I googled (I’ve started seeing this as a verb recently; what do you think?) on “quinacrine AND sterilization” and the words that leap out at me from the results include “controversial” (over and over again), “dangerous”, “painful”, “forced sterilization” and “guinea pigs”. [via Caught in Between]

    What does the unique election of 2000 mean for health policy in the United States? The answer is complex. The closeness of
    the presidential vote and the divided Congress suggest that changes will be modest and incremental. Yet Democratic
    and Republican voters differ sharply in their views on many issues concerning health care, such as the role of the federal
    government and access to abortion…. In this article, we use data from public-opinion polls and other sources to highlight the differences in views on health policy
    between Republican and Democratic voters. We then discuss the implications of the 2000 election.” New England Journal of Medicine

    You can buy happiness… it costs
    £1m
    . “Economists have for the first time discovered the price of
    happiness, and it is at least £1m. New research suggests that,
    contrary to folklore, money can bring happiness, but it takes a
    large amount.” Sunday Times of London

    The Famine the World Forgot. More than a million reportedly face starvation in drought-ridden Afghanistan. The draconian policies of the Taliban are destroying the livelihood of the country and willl prevent access to international relief agencies. This regime runs a close second, IMHO, to the Khmer Rouge’s fabled reign of terror in Cambodia in their ability to destroy their country with a slavish adherence to doctrine. UN Sanctions against the Taliban for harboring Osama bin Laden, on the other hand, compound the issue. Time

    A couple of pieces about disparate English transplants to America:

    “Swift, devastating and alert…, a first-rate hater”: The Guardian reviews Unacknowledged Legislation by Christopher Hitchens, English polemicist who has mastered “the fine art of causing maximum offence to most people,” although the reviewer admits he doesn’t understand much of what Hitchens fumes about, since Hitchens now writes from and about the U.S.

    Getting uppity in suburbia: “While the sun has long since set on the
    British Empire, its legacy lingers at a cul-de-sac near you.” Anglophilia graduates from cultural tradition to
    powerful branding tool.
    . Salon

    Pylons are cancer risk – official. After many previous negative studies, an epidemiologist in the UK reports a small but significant increase in cancer risk among children living near high tension power lines. The article has links to take you further in investigating this issue should you desire. This finding may open a floodgate for lawsuits by affected families. Sunday Times of London

    CIA’s Anti-Drug Message for Kids; it joins other federal agencies in projecting a clean and sober message. However, it doesn’t come clean on its complicity in fostering international narcotrafficking.

    I searched in vain on the CIA’s Web site for any mea culpa regarding the agency’s
    support for counterinsurgency campaigns waged by various drug-smuggling “freedom
    fighters.”

    There was no mention of massive amounts of still unaccounted-for U.S. aid to
    Pakistani military officers and Afghan mujahadeen rebel leaders, which helped
    grease a major arms-for-heroin pipeline in Southwest Asia during the 1980s. Much of
    the dirty cash was laundered through institutions such as the scandal-ridden Bank of
    Credit and Commerce International, which functioned, not coincidentally, as a conduit
    for CIA operations in the region.

    At the same time in Central America, Lt. Col. Oliver North and high-level CIA
    personnel aided and abetted big-time cocaine smugglers who ferried weapons to the
    Nicaraguan contras fighting the Sandinista government.

    How to Blow $700 Million a Year on a Bad Habit: “DARE, the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, took
    its first step toward recovery on February 14 — it admitted it had a problem.
    Eighteen years after its inception, DARE finally acknowledged what study
    after peer-reviewed study has found: Despite expending $700 million per
    year, the DARE program has not helped reduce teen drug use. In fact,
    according to the latest government study, teen drug use has risen since 1990
    and remains stable at record-high levels.” Tompaine.com

    Computer ‘can talk like a baby’.

    “An Israeli company has created a
    conversational computer program it claims
    could revolutionise the way people interact
    with machines.

    Artificial Intelligence Enterprises (Ai) says its
    Hal program can already converse convincingly
    and has the vocabulary and grasp of language
    of a 15-month-old child.

    Already transcripts of conversations generated
    by the computerised child have reportedly
    fooled independent judges into thinking they
    were reading a write-up of a real conversation.

    Now, the company is working on giving its
    creation the conversational ability of a
    five-year-old. Then it plans to use the program
    to do away with keyboards and let people
    simply talk to their computers.”

    BBC

    Everyday fantasia: “With the help of sophisticated behavioral
    brain-imaging and molecular genetic methods,
    researchers are coming closer to
    understanding what drives the extraordinary
    sensory condition called synesthesia.” First psychologists showed that, in synaesthetes, the associations across sensory modalities are stable over time and involuntary (even when they interfere with normal perception), implying a fixed and automatic mechanism in their brains. fMRI studies showed that the cross-modality sensory areas were actually activated, as one would expect — for example, in a synaesthete who “sees” music s/he is hearing, the visual areas are active as well as the auditory.

    In fact, it may be the concept, not the percept, that causes the sensory experience (for example, in one synaesthete tho experiences colors for numbers, presenting him with “5+2” causes him to experience the color associated with the concept “7”). This would turn on its head the usual “bottom-up” notion of sensory processing and would suggest that synaesthetes demonstrate a lack of the usual inhibition of “feed-backward” connections from high-level multisensory areas to single-sense cortical areas. Another theory suggests that synaesthetes’ brains may be richly crosswired with extra connections, perhaps a connectivity with which we are all endowed at birth but which normally devolves. This is not an alien concept; brain development is known in other regards to depend on the dying-off of neuronal connections as much as the elaboration of new ones over time. Any neurophysiological theory of synaesthesia would have to account for the fact that the phenomenon is temporarily induced by hallucinogenic drugs; it would be hard to imagine that the drug experience stimulates the rapid growth of new neuronal connections which then disappear after the drug is out of the user’s system.

    Whatever theory is correct, an implication that occurs to me is that there is probably a continuum of synaesthetic experience from total absence to fullblown. While I’m certainly not a robust synaesthete, I suspect I have a degree of the overconnectivity, since I’ve always noticed I have vivid and enduring experiences of colors associated with various concepts — numbers, sounds, names of people and the days of the week. For example, “Monday” is a kind of lime green and “Thursday” a rose-tinged grey, and always has been — no, really! On the other hand (indulge me for a moment), these may not be neurophysiological correlations at all, but rather unconscious psychological ones — i.e. not classically-described synaesthesia at all. For example, while writing this paragraph, endeavoring to describe the color experience I have for “Friday,” I was just now surprised to find that what first came to mind was the phrase “fried-egg-yolk yellow.” It immediately made me wonder if the connection is the sound-association between “Friday” and “fried”, not a cross-modality experience at all. In other words, “Friday” may be that shade of yellow because it reminds me of “fried egg.” There may be similar associative reasons for the other color experiences that are there despite remaining opaque to me so far. Oh, well.

    In any case, interesting to me in my professional work, where I focus on the phenomenology of psychotic symptoms, is the suggestion by some researchers that synaesthesia may share some neurobiological similarity with hallucinations. Could schizophrenics think thery’re hearing voices talking to them because they’re, unbeknownst to themselves, experiencing “crosstalk” from a sensory experience in a disparate modality such as taste or vision? This does not at all square with my own theory of hallucinatory experience, but it’s intriguing nonetheless, although difficult to study both because its experiencers are in distress to an extent that would make it hard for them to cooperate with neurophysiological investigation; and because most actively psychotic patients accessible to study are medicated (and it would be unethical not to medicate them, IMHO!).

    One curiosity I’ve always had about synaesthesia is if the “crossed” sensory modalities ever include the kinesthetic sense. Often considered our “sixth sense”, this is our visceral body experience — i.e. our perception of the position, extent, and movement of our body parts in space. Are there synaesthetes who, for example, experience a sound or a color when they swing their arm around, take a step, open their mouth? How about the reverse — experiencing movement in or change of position of a body part as part of the perception of a sound or a shape? [Could this relate to the visceral component of aesthetic experience? (Benjamin Whorf: “Probably in the first instance metaphor arises from synesthesia and not the reverse.”)]

    A number of fascinating hits emerge from a Google search on “(synesthesia OR synaesthesia) AND (kinesthesia OR kinaesthesia)”, including this collection of interesting analyses of Beatles music.

    Does Being a Jock Make a Man Gay? Timothy Noah:

    ‘The theory that ring finger size is destiny has resurfaced.
    Faithful Chatterbox readers will recall that a year ago this
    column asked, “Does A Short Index Finger Make You Gay?”
    Chatterbox cited a study published in Nature (click here to
    read a press release on the findings) maintaining that lesbians
    tend to have ring fingers that are exceptionally long relative to
    their index fingers, apparently because their mothers had high
    levels of male hormones in the womb. A less intuitive finding
    was that gay men also tended to have long ring fingers, owing,
    again, to their mothers having high levels of male hormones in
    the womb, though this correlation was more tentative. Mark
    Breedlove, the Berkeley psychology professor who authored
    the study, used the occasion to suggest that gay men, far from
    being feminized men, were in fact hypermasculinized men.
    Chatterbox himself struck a rigorously neutral pose, then
    stated Chatterbox’s Law of Biological Determinism:
    Conservatives believe that genes determine everything
    except homosexuality, while liberals believe that genes
    determine nothing except homosexuality.’ Slate

    Although scientists still aren’t sure what human consciousness is, they are coming up with something just as
    intriguing — neurobiological evidence for the human unconscious state. In psychoanalysis, a core concept is that signal anxiety — the unconscious anticipation of an adverse outcome when presented with a situation reminiscent of an unpleasant event from the past — prompts our neurotic reactions. Now two scientists — Philip Wong of the New School in NY and Howard Shevrin of U. Michigan — have demonstrated neurobiological evidence for the existence of this “immaterial” unconscious process. Psychiatric News

    A reader pointed me to this — Frontline: the merchants of cool, a report on the creators and marketers of popular culture for teenagers and the symbiotic relationship they have with modern youth. Interviews with cultural critics, media executives and market researchers, as well as reactions from teens and a dissection of media conglomerates. There’s a feature on “how to get really close to teens’ lives” and another on “what it’s like hunting for ‘cool’ “. It’s going to take some delving into…

    The Browser in the Belly. Jorn Barger, of Robot Wisdom, thinks web-based phrase-searching is the key to success in scholarship:

    “Searching at http://www.google.com has been made so efficient that I
    almost called this article ‘the Google in the Belly’: the first step to
    becoming an Internet scholar is to train yourself so that whenever
    and wherever
    you see an unfamiliar phrase, your immediate gut-
    instinct is to copy it into Google…

    But for literary research in particular, Web search-engines offer
    something far, far more powerful than a super-encyclopedia– they
    effectively offer a _super-concordance_ of every document on the Web…
    and not just the simple word-by-word concordances that scholars have
    learned to settle for– if you understand the search-syntax, you can
    search for any _phrase_ in every document on the Web.”

    Here’s Jorn’s customized Finnegans Wake search page (you might find it useful for other things too…)

    ‘Noted Weed’ (sonnet 76): Bard ‘used drugs for inspiration’. “Scientists in South Africa have uncovered
    evidence that Shakespeare might have been a
    cannabis user who took the drug as a source
    of inspiration.

    Research published in
    the South African
    Journal of Science

    shows that pipes dug
    up from the garden of
    Shakespeare’s home in
    Stratford upon Avon
    contain traces of
    cannabis.” BBC

    At Lehman’s, the Only Thing That Gets a No Is Electricity. This mail order company has provided the Amish community with a source of non-electric alternatives to all sorts of appliances and equipment for more than 40 years. (Ironically, its website brings in a good proportion of its sales). Now the California energy crisis has greatly boosted the company’s sales volume. LA Times

    Not-Really-Surprising-News Dept.: ‘Community work linked to happiness, a new study finds.

    A nationwide survey conducted by Harvard University and the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University
    examined “social capital” — the connections that bind people together and strengthen the places they live.

    Researchers found that areas where residents had high civil involvement were happier than those with more
    wealth but less community participation.’ Nando Times

    The keys to a quick mind: “If you want your children to extend their
    minds, develop skills in multiple dimensions
    and become ‘whole’ human beings, forget
    yoga, vitamin C and green vegetables. Insist,
    instead, that they learn music.” The Telegraph

    Soul-Searching Doctors Find Life After Death. ‘The first scientific study of “near-death”
    experiences has found new evidence to suggest
    that consciousness or the “soul” can continue to
    exist after the brain has ceased to function.

    The findings by two eminent doctors, based on a
    year-long study of heart attack survivors, could
    provoke fresh controversy over that most profound
    of questions.’

    Silence of the Lambs: the election story never told. All along, it’s seemed that this was the bigger travesty in Jeb Bush’s Florida, as investigative journalist Greg Palast reports:

    Here’s how the president of the United States was
    elected: In the months leading up to the November
    balloting, Florida Governor Jeb Bush and his Secretary
    of State, Katherine Harris, ordered local elections
    supervisors to purge 64,000 voters from voter lists on the
    grounds that they were felons who were not entitled to
    vote in Florida. As it turns out, these voters weren’t
    felons, or at least, only a very few were. However, the
    voters on this “scrub list” were, notably,
    African-American (about 54 percent), while most of the
    others wrongly barred from voting were white and
    Hispanic Democrats.

    Beginning in November, this extraordinary news ran, as
    it should, on Page 1 of the country’s leading paper.
    Unfortunately, it was in the wrong country: Britain.

    An examination of the docility of the American press. mediachannel.org

    Fourth Alzheimer’s Drug Approved: “Alzheimer’s sufferers are about to get a fourth
    medication option to help slow the worsening of the devastating
    brain disease.

    The Food and Drug Administration approved
    Reminyl, a drug derived from daffodil bulbs, late Wednesday.” The generic name of Reminyl is galantamine. It works via the same mechanism of existing Alzheimer’s drugs — it’s an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor. Early animnal research indicated that it might have other neuroprotective properties as well and, thus, be superior to existing medications for Alzheimer’s dementia. But in preapproval testing, the drug’s manufacturer Janssen tested it only agsinst placebo, nto against other Alzheimer’s drugs.

    Scholars lament Afghan relic purge “Defying international
    condemnation, Afghanistan’s ruling
    Taliban turned to artillery and explosives
    on Friday to destroy two giant rock-hewn
    Buddhas they decry as un-Islamic.

    Mortars and cannon were being used to destroy the Buddha
    statues in Bamiyan in central Afghanistan, defying protests and
    diplomatic pressure, sources in Kabul said.” The Taliban have been deaf to plaints from the United Nations, the European
    Union, Russia, Pakistan, and India to reconsider. They
    consider their efforts to be a campaign against idolatry. I have long cherished my memory of my visit to the Bamiyan Valley in the mid-’70’s, and wish there were some effective way to halt this ignorant travesty. New York Times

    Connection duo, WBUR disconnect permanently. The Boston Globe describes the concluding blows in this dispute on which I blinked earlier. While the WBUR management issued a statement describing Lydon and McGrath’s “inform(ing) WBUR that they are leaving their employment to pursue careers in a for-profit, independent production company”, Lydon countered with a statement that WBUR had unilaterally terminated negotiations afteer locking them out for a week. Both Lydon and the station are the losers here, but of course the real losers will be The Connection‘s listeners. WBUR says it will continue the show with a series of guest hosts until they designate a replacement in late spring, but it remains in doubt whether anyone can follow Lydon’s “tough act” of wit, depth, literacy and passion. Lydon and McGrath seem to want to find other outlets to deliver similar content, but an erudite, receptive audience will elude them unless Boston’s other NPR station WGBH hosts them. They’d be blown out of the water by audiences anywhere else in the talk radio universe. These competing statements sound for all the world like the positions the players take in a classical labor-management dispute — essentially, countercharges of greed vs. exploitation — and should be understood in the context of recent struggles between creative personnel and celebrities on the one hand and the producers and media channels that distribute their content on the other hand, for control of the equity value of thier charisma, celebrity or creativity.

    Author Bill McKibben recently profiled Lydon and the dispute in Salon, making his biases clear at the outset:

    “The
    Connection” is the best call-in radio show that anyone’s ever
    done; Lydon is America’s best interviewer; and the hours
    between 10 a.m. and noon feel lonely as hell without him.

    Those are large claims, but you can test them out for yourself at
    theconnection.org, where a full archive of recent shows can be
    accessed via streaming audio…

    If you think this is easy, listen to “Talk of the Nation,” the main
    NPR chat show, some afternoon. Juan Williams currently
    presides over the festivities, sounding uncannily like a man
    ordering cheeseburgers over a drive-through microphone. He
    is no nincompoop; “Eyes on the Prize,” his TV history of the
    civil rights movement, was hot stuff. But the radio has clearly
    defeated him. With its intimacy and its acres of open time, it
    requires a nimbleness that he can’t muster.

    Arsenic: A new type of endocrine disrupter? “Recently, it has become clear that decades
    of exposure to very low doses of arsenic — such as levels found in drinking water in many areas of the United States — may
    substantially increase the risk of vascular disease, diabetes and several types of cancer. Until now, little was known about
    how arsenic might contribute to these diseases, however.

    Using cultured animal cells, a team led by toxicologist Joshua Hamilton, director of Dartmouth’s Toxic Metals Research
    Program, found that exposure to very low concentrations of arsenic disrupts the function of the glucocorticoid receptor, a
    steroid hormone receptor that regulates a wide range of biological processes.” EurekAlert!

    Slaughter of the innocuous. A vet and researcher into the history of
    foot-and-mouth at the University of
    Manchester (UK) writes: “From the panic and the headlines you would imagine that this
    is a most dreadful disease. Yet foot-and-mouth very rarely kills
    the animals that catch it. They almost always recover, and in a
    couple of weeks at that. It almost never gets passed on to
    humans and when it does it is a mild infection only. The meat
    from animals that have had it is fit to eat. In clinical terms,
    foot-and-mouth is about as serious, to animals or to people, as a
    bad cold.

    Why, then, the concern? And why the policy of wholesale
    slaughter? The concern, of course, is economic. This is a
    financial issue, not an animal welfare issue, nor a human health
    one.” The Times of London

    The British Medical Journal reviews Vivisection or Science? An Investigation into Testing Drugs and
    Safeguarding Health
    . Italian scientist Pietro Croce used to do it himself, but now says animal experimentation is unethical — not because of what it does to the animals, but what it does to us. As Russ points out, however, a response by a Dr JH Botting to the favorable review of this book points out: ‘The antivivisection literature is replete with emotive propaganda and exaggerated claims of “bad
    science”. However a definitive examination of the literature generally exposes criticisms as spurious.
    Their perpetuation in books such as “Vivisection or science” does nothing for the ethical debate.’

    Bush’s Death Squad 2001: ‘The bill, the Terrorist Elimination Act of 2001, was introduced on Jan. 3 by Republican Bob Barr. It would nullify parts of
    three previous executive orders prohibiting assassination or conspiracy to commit assassination. The new bill states that,
    “as the threat from terrorism grows, America must continue to investigate effective ways to combat the menace posed by
    those who would murder American citizens simply to make a political point.” ‘ Critics say this just legitimizes what we’ve been doing all along, that the prohibition on state-sponsored assassination has never been taken seriously. eye [via Wood s Lot]

    Samuel R. DelanyWith excitement I clicked on this link in Wood s Lot; an Interview with Samuel R. Delany! Alas, it is from 1996. Left me wondering what he’s up to now; found this interview from November, 2000. Interesting aside — he apparently interviews himself. “K. Leslie Steiner”, from the 1996 conversation, is said to be a pseudonym of his. The discussion early in the interview about how he declined face-to-face contact and insisted they conduct their interchange in written form takes on new meaning in that light.

    He beat me to the punch! I swear, I had the same association Chuck Taggart, at Looka!, had. As he put it:

    He reads! He reads! Here is my favorite line from The
    Blank Stare’s address to last night’s joint session of Congress:

    Some say my tax plan is too big, others say it
    is too small. I respectfully disagree. This plan is just
    right.

    Even though it’s claimed that this man does not read books, we
    can all rest in confidence that he has at least read “Goldilocks
    and the Three Bears” (or at least his speechwriter has).

    I guess this is how they’ll try to sell this thing to us — by
    assuming that the American public is as simpleminded as Shrub.”

    Eugenics Alive: coming soon to a country near you. On the threshold of human genome engineering, ‘fretting about the ethics of these issues is a thing that only Western countries are going to do. Elsewhere, eugenics — including
    “genetic enhancement” — will not be fretted about or debated, it will just be done.’

    A rough kind of eugenics has, in fact, been practiced in China for a long time. Several years ago, when I was living in that country, I mentioned Down’s
    Syndrome in conversation with a Chinese colleague. She did not know the English term and I did not know the Chinese, so we had to look it up in a
    dictionary. “Oh,” she said when she got it. “That’s not a problem in China. They don’t get out of the delivery room.”

    As I said: While we are agonizing over the rights and wrongs of it, elsewhere they will just be doing it. National Review

    And speaking of eugenics:

    The “Genius Babies,” and How They Grew: the ‘truth’ about the “Nobel Prize sperm bank”, the Repository for Germinal Choice. Slate

    ‘Old Wine, New Bottles’ Dept.:

    Once-Weekly Prozac Approved by FDA. The formulation contains 90 mg. of the active ingredient, fluoxetine, in a time-release formula, and is intended for patients whose depressive symptoms have stabilized but need continued maintenance drug therapy to prevent a relapse. The truth of the matter, however, is that fluoxetine has such gradual rate of metabolism and elimination from the body that the plain old original Prozac formulation, which is usually 20 mg., can be given less frequently than daily — in some cases as infrequently as once a week — for many maintenance purposes, and (as scandalous as its price seemed when it first entered the marketplace in the early ’80’s) is considerably less expensive. Eli Lilly’s last decades of profit were built upon Prozac’s cash cow, but it has seen its market share erode with the introduction of subsequent (and in some cases superior) antidepressants, and the company will take a big hit in August when it loses patent protection over Prozac and a generic fluoxetine is launched by a competitor. A new formulation like Prozac Weekly will regain them proprietary rights.

    In a similar maneuver, they’ve recently released the product Sarafem for premenstrual tension symptoms. This is plain old fluoxetine as well! The clinical literature has long noted benefit from SSRIs for PMS symptoms whether the sufferer is depressed or not, and many of us have long prescribed Prozac for that indication. There’s nothing different about Sarafem [except its ability to support Lilly’s stock prices?]

    This is the second psychiatric instance of a new pharmaceutical marketing trend that seems particularly disingenuous from my vantage point. Here was the first — have you seen any of the TV ads for Zyban, marketed as a smoking cessation aid? The ads tell you it’s “not for everyone,” in particular mentioning that you shouldn’t take it if you’re taking the antidepressant Wellbutrin. They don’t explain why, but the reason is a simple one — Glaxo Wellcome’s Zyban is identical to Glaxo Wellcome’s Wellbutrin; they’re both, generically, bupropion, in the same 150 mg. sustained release form, at virtually the same price.

    In my opinion, there is no justification except the attempt to increase market share through deceptive marketing for one company to push the same pharmaceutical under different brand names for different indications. Instead, the product labelling of their existing product should be changed to reflect any added indications they receive from the FDA. I have already seen several cases in which patients have been prescribed Zyban by their primary care MDs while receiving Wellbutrin from mental health practitioners, either because of a lack of crosstalk among the parties or ignorance on the part of one practitioner of the ingredients in the other prescription. And the potential medical consequences of such inadvertent “doubling up” of bupropion dosing, including seizures, are nontrivial! TV advertising which prompts patients to develop brand recognition of medications and ask for products from their physicians by brand name is part of the problem. I find that, over the last decade, there’s been erosion in patients’ understanding of the concept of generic equivalents of medications. Unless there’s a good reason to prefer a particular company’s brand (and there rarely is), I do all my prescribing by the generic name of the medication.

    Sex-Change Deputy to Break New Ground. “Another milestone was reached
    on Tuesday in the Lone Star state when a Texas sheriff said one of his top deputies would
    become the first police officer in the state to undergo a sex change operation.

    Bexar County Sheriff Ralph Lopez said he had given the male deputy permission to start
    wearing a woman’s uniform and ordered the other deputies not to razz him about it.” Might be the first time Texas lawmakers are ordered to mind their manners with a lady…

    Open Season on the Outer Planets. Space scientists at the recent Lunar and Planetary Institute in Houston brainstormed about the next two decades of exploration of the outer planets under NASA’s newly-formed Outer Planets Program Directorate. Outer planet projects are expected to be picked in open competition among a concentration of innovative and sometimes outrageous proposals.

    Today’s New York Times could fill a weblog, as in the next six entries:

    In Dawn of Society, Dance Was Center Stage. An Israeli archaeologist says he has pieced together evidence of a role for dance as early as the transition from hunter-gatherer to pastoral society in the Middle East. New York Times

    A Short, Speckled History of a Transplanted Hand. After twenty-nine months, the hand is amputated by the same surgeon who had originally done the transplant. The patient says he feels the best he has since he received the hand, and acknowledges his responsibility for not keeping up with the anti-rejection drug regimen and the physical therapy necessary to maintain its viability. This man who originally told his surgeons he had lost his hand in an industrial accident turned out to instead have received the injury while in prison serving time for fraud. His con game evaded months of pre-transplant interviewing and psychological testing. Nine patients in six countries have since received transplanted hands, including three who have gotten double transplants of both the right and left hands. The New York Times report says that all appear to be doing well.

    Experiment in Assisted Living Exposes Regulatory Confusion. The article describes the way assisted living in New York has been transformed [and I’ve seen the same thing here in Massachusetts]. Starting out as a means of allowing a continuum of escalating care so that elders can “age in place” in a setting of their own choosing, assisted living centers have instead become ways to house enfeebled Alzheimer’s patients with less regulatory oversight, and hence less adequate care, than in nursing homes. In essence, the industry has backed its way into being part of the healthcare industry rather than a housing alternative, in the process securing itself a niche in which it’s protected from regulation that would eat into its profits.

    The headline says “China Ratifies Human Rights Treaty.” But read further and you see that they “voted not to accept a key provision in the pact.” Human rights groups are guardedly optomistic that this will make a real difference, but I’m dubious. This seems like window-dressing to deflect scrutiny of China’s record on human rights two weeks before a U.N. human rights conference in Geneva. New York Times

    Clinton Pardons Called ‘Accident Waiting to Happen’: “From the beginning of his presidency,
    Bill Clinton moved to take away the Justice Department’s
    traditional role of being first to review requests for
    clemency, the agency’s former pardon attorney told a
    congressional committee Wednesday.

    ‘The final Clinton pardons were an accident waiting to
    happen,’ Margaret Colgate Love, who served as pardon
    attorney from 1990 to 1997, told the House Judiciary
    subcommittee on the Constitution. New York Times

    A 7.0 Earthquake Shakes Pacific Northwest. Does it seem to you that newsworthy earthquakes seem to hit disparate places on the globe in clusters? Within the month, we’ve seen the Gujarat quake, the El Salvador quake, and now this. Is this a geophysical clustering or a sampling effect of what the media pay attention to? In related news, researchers studying the magnitude-7.7 Indian quake now say that faults beneath California’s populous areas “could
    produce larger earthquakes
    than
    previously thought… The type of fault that produced the deadly Jan. 26 quake – a
    blind thrust fault – is also found in California, including at least
    one running directly beneath the skyscrapers of downtown Los
    Angeles.” Blind thrust faults are difficult to map because they do not break the surface. Earlier estimates capped the potential force of a blind thrust quake in California at not much more than the 1989 San Francisco earthquake or the 1994 Northridge quake, but the researchers are revising their estimates considerably upward after looking at Gujarat.

    Barbara Ehrenreich reviews Trust Us, We’re Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future by Sheldon Rampton and John Stauber:

    “… a gripping exposé of the public
    relations industry and the scientists who
    back their business-funded,
    anti-consumer-safety agendas. There are two kinds of “experts”
    in question–the PR spin doctors behind the scenes and the
    “independent” experts paraded before the public, scientists who
    have been hand-selected, cultivated, and paid handsomely to
    promote the views of corporations involved in controversial
    actions. Lively writing on controversial topics such as dioxin,
    bovine growth hormone, and genetically modified food makes this
    a real page-turner…”

    LA Times op-ed piece by two Rand Corporation analysts on why the NMD (national missile defense) program could make China a bona fide nuclear threat.

    The only thing that stands between China and a large strategic nuclear arsenal is
    motivation. And that could be deeply affected by the decisions that the United
    States makes about national missile defense and perhaps even theater missile
    defense in Asia.
    Ultimately, the United States may decide that, on balance, its security would be
    better off with a national missile defense, even if China expands its nuclear forces
    significantly. But China’s possible response and all of its implications must become
    part of the debate.

    As the Spike Report pointed out, this piece carries one of the more idiosyncratic headlines seen on an op-ed page in a long time.

    Skeptic Magazine editor Michael Shermer’s exposé of How Psychics and Mediums Work: a case study of James Van Praagh. “Throughout much of 1998 and 1999, the best-selling book in America was by a man who says he can talk to the dead (and so can you, if you buy his book).” Shermer concludes, “The freedom to grieve and love is one of the fundamentals of being human. To try to take tht freedom away on a chimera of feigned hope and promises that cannot be filled is inhuman…”

    More fMRIe (functional magnetic resonance imaging excitement): Location of Sense of Humor Discovered. Activity in a region in the orbital prefrontal cortex correlates with the experience of appreciating a joke or a pun. It makes sense that the arguably uniquely human (cf. for example the 1938 classic Homo Ludens: a study of the play element in culture by historian Johann Huizinga) capacity to appreciate the complex phenomenon of a joke resides in this uniquely human cortical area. Independent

    Online debate “What is the evidence for and against the modern theory of
    evolution?”
    between Dr. Jonathan Wells, who has Ph.D.’s in molecular and cell biology (Berkeley) and religious studies (Yale) and is the author of the recent Icons of Evolution, who argues that therre are serious chellenges to the “neo-Darwinian idea
    that random mutations can create new body plans and organisms”; and Dr. Massimo Pigliucci, director of the Evolutionary Ecology Lab at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville and prize-winning teacher of evolution. The URL above links you to the complete debate in Real Video. The recent event was hosted by U.T.’s Theatre dept. as part of a week commemorating the
    75th anniversary of the Scopes-Monkey Trial.

    Study: Autumn Babies Live Longer. There’s a 0.3- to 0.6-year increase in lifespan for babies born during the autumn in either the northern or southern hemispheres, according to a new study. Authors speculate that it relates to the nutritional benefits of being pregnant during summer and early fall; if so, this would probably speak to maximizing consumption of fresh fruits and vegetables during pregnancy regardless of the season. [Sorry, an earlier version of this post misstated the study as finding a “3-6%” increase in lifespan, which is of course far more substantial.]