July 27, 2006

Bed sharing 'drains men's brains'

Bed sharing 'drains men's brains'

Bed sharing disturbed sleep qualitySharing a bed with someone could temporarily reduce your brain power - at least if you are a man - Austrian scientists suggest.
When men spend the night with a bed mate their sleep is disturbed, whether they make love or not, and this impairs their mental ability the next day.
The lack of sleep also increases a man's stress hormone levels.
According to the New Scientist study, women who share a bed fare better because they sleep more deeply.
Sleepless nights
Professor Gerhard Kloesch and colleagues at the University of Vienna studied eight unmarried, childless couples in their 20s.
Each couple was asked to spend 10 nights sleeping together and 10 apart while the scientists assessed their rest patterns with questionnaires and wrist activity monitors.
The next day the couples were asked to perform simple cognitive tests and had their stress hormone levels checked.
Sharing the bed space with someone who is making noises and who you have to fight with for the duvet is not sensible
Professor Neil Stanley, a sleep expert at the University of Surrey
Although the men reported they had slept better with a partner, they fared worse in the tests, with their results suggesting they actually had more disturbed sleep.
Both sexes had a more disturbed night's sleep when they shared their bed, Professor Kloesch told a meeting of the Forum of European Neuroscience.
But women apparently managed to sleep more deeply when they did eventually drop off, since they claimed to be more refreshed than their sleep time suggested.
Their stress hormone levels and mental scores did not suffer to the same extent as the men.
But the women still reported that they had the best sleep when they were alone in bed.
Bed sharing also affected dream recall. Women remembered more after sleeping alone and men recalled best after sex.
Separate beds
Dr Neil Stanley, a sleep expert at the University of Surrey, said: "It's not surprising that people are disturbed by sleeping together.
"Historically, we have never been meant to sleep in the same bed as each other. It is a bizarre thing to do.
"Sleep is the most selfish thing you can do and it's vital for good physical and mental health.
"Sharing the bed space with someone who is making noises and who you have to fight with for the duvet is not sensible.
"If you are happy sleeping together that's great, but if not there is no shame in separate beds."
He said there was a suggestion that women are pre-programmed to cope better with broken sleep.
"A lot of life events that women have disturb sleep - bringing up children, the menopause and even the menstrual cycle," he explained.
But Dr Stanley added people did get used to sharing a bed.
"If they have shared their bed with their partner for a long time they miss them and that will disturb sleep."

April 12, 2006

In the Eye of the Beholder


The canadian town of Clemesport, Nova Scotia, has had a controversy about on man's art. Dou Duckrel, a used clthing salesman, hung 400 neckties in a tree and called it art. His neighbors disagreed. They called it ugly, vulgar and unsightly. The ties. Hanging in the tree for over a year, became worm and tatterd. Finally, after receiving six anonymous complaints, the county warden ordered Duckrel to remove the ties. He called them dangerous. They could distract drivers and cause acidents. Art or not, road safety settled the controversy.

This is what I first saw when I glanced at a telephone pole on 31st and Hennepin in Uptown Minneapolis the other day. A nice street-art project, I thought. A simple intervention that reminds us to live a verdant life, to embrace lushness and welcome abundance--and even tear a piece off. Or something.
Of course, I was a little skeptical: is this an ad for a band or a day spa? Am I being suckered by a buzz marketing campaign, some scheme to be paid off, eventually, by an ad for malt liquor?
I went back, this time with plenty of time and a camera. Here’s what I found.
Not sure which interpretation I prefer.

The Incredible Machine

The human body is an incredible machine. Bow there is new CD-ROM computer program that will take you inside the human body. It's called Adam, the Inside Story. It was disigned for medical schools, but it's now availavle for Mac and Windows users at home. It took three and a half years to develop and displays 3,600 anatomical structures with specific examples, such as how food is swallowed and what happens when a bee stings. It's interactive too. Kids will love the 12-piece puzzle of the skull!

Hearing is Believing

California's Livermore Laboratory was once a center or nuclear-weapons research. Now it is turning to peaceful research. It's developing an urban navigation system that will give new freedom of movement to the seeing impaired. The system combines solar-powered "smart tags" attached to buildings and tiny transceicers carried by the user. The smart tags send a coded message to the transceiver, which carries the database of imformation. The user then hears the information on his tranceiver. The ststem will go international once manufacturers agree on universal codes.

Russian Style Relief

Life in Russia has never been easy, but in the last few years it has become downright dangerous. The transition to capitalism is producing a high level of stress and new ways of dealing with it. For example, there's paintballs, a war game for adults with guns that shoot paintballs, not bullets. At $200 for entrance and rental, it's very popular and profitable. For those who need a more drastic relief form stress, there's bungee jumping. It's the new fad that appeals to the nearly suicidal.

Preserving Traditions

In Atlanta, Georgia, there is a new trend at a very taditional Japanense school for the children of Japanese businessmen. What's changiing is the student body. About 20 percent of the students are Americans. Taking the opportunity for language immersion and an international education, they participate in everything - even the regular English classes. For the teachers the big challenge is keeping international harmony while maintaining a sense of competition to prepare the Japanese students for Japan's tough university entrance exams.

Canadian Ginseng

Canada, a rising producer of quality ginseng, has about 10 percent of the world market. Ginsengs has been produced in Ontario for about 100 years. Thirteen years ago, a farmer in British Columbia replaced two hectares of alfalfa with ginseng. Since then production has doubled and tripled. Long fabled for for strengthening the body, the memory and the immune system, ginseng also stimulates the economy. Dried ginseng fetches a staggering $100 per kilo, or ablut $34,000 a hectare, many times what alfalfa could generate.

Massage for Moms

Pregnancy may be beautiful, but it can also be a pain in the neck, the back and just about everywhere else. So mother-to-be are going for massages with licensed massage therapist avoids points that stimulate labor, but during labor they work those points hard. The goal of massage is to give berth without a lot of medical intervention. Skeptical hospital staff is being won over, as are the mothers.

Tools Library

Most libraries lend books to build the mind. But there's a library in Berkeley, California, that lends tools to build or repari almost anything. The tool library was set up in 1979 with a $30,000 federal grant, and is supported by local property taxes. The servive is free to help low-income familes improve theri homes, their property values and their lives. There are 2,500 tools available. If information on how to use the tools is needed, the library next door has all the how to do it books.

Big Habits Die Hard

China has the world's biggest tobacco habit : 220 million cartons of cigarette are sold every day. The country's 300 million smokers are growning by 300,000-400,000 a year. That's good news for the Chinese government, which profits form the stateowned tobacco monopoly. Tobacco, China's largest industry, produces revenues close to 5 billion U.S. dollars a year. Growing sales in China help offset declining sales at home,. With profit a clear motive, it's obvious why little is done to discourge the habit.