Weird News of the World Thread - Part 2

American Cheese Was Invented By a Canadian

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http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/20...aft-before-the-were-food-giants-they-were-men

Mind Blown


It looks :barf:

And by way, your French Fries aren't French, for us fries are Belgian.
 
lol, A few years ago US - France relations were testy so there was a movement to start calling French Fries Freedom Fries or something.

Yes, it was during the Irak War when our President refused to participate.
 
Social Media Can Make Standardized Test Questions Go Viral

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When standardized tests are shared nationwide—as they now are, under the Common Core system that's been adopted in 46 states—cheating suddenly becomes a whole lot easier. Especially since teenagers now share just about everything on social media.

As we're all aware, platforms like Twitter and Instagram have a way of making illicit activities go viral. According to Quartz, the testing company Pearson has reported 76 instances of students sharing standardized test questions on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter since February.

Of course, we've probably been guilty of cheating on tests since test taking-first began. But this year is special, marking the first time that a large number of states began taking identical Common Core tests. Many schools are forced spread the computer-based testing out over multiple days to accommodate all of their students. These two circumstances, coupled with a smartphone-armed teenager, may create the perfect storm of conditions for cheating to get out of hand.

Right now, testing companies are playing a game of whack-a-mole, monitoring leaked information as best they can and ratting cheaters out to their schools, which are responsible for taking disciplinary action. If this sounds a bit sketchy to you, you're not alone. We're already seeing backlash from parents and some school authorities who are concerned about the obvious privacy implications of testing companies monitoring kids' Instagram accounts.

It's not yet clear whether, or how, tech-enhanced cheating will affect test results nationwide. But if there's one inescapable truth here, it's that social media's pervasive influence can no longer be ignored in the classroom.

http://qz.com/369321/american-testing-companies-are-probing-twitter-to-catch-students-cheating/

Is anyone surprised by this?
 
To Feed the World, We May Need to Hack Photosynthesis

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One of the biggest challenges of the 21st century will be figuring out how to feed our rising global population. Now, some scientists are making the radical claim that growing more food won't be enough—we literally need to hack photosynthesis.

Humans have been breeding crop plants to grow faster and yield more for approximately 10,000 years. The technological developments of the mid-20th century saw rapid increases in agricultural productivity, which kicked off an era of exponential population growth. But in the past several decades, yield improvements have slowed as many crops have reached their biological limits. If we'd like to continue hastening crop growth to meet the demands of our rising population (there may be nearly 10 billion of us by mid-century), natural breeding programs might not cut it anymore.

But what if we could do something more dramatic? When it comes to squeezing calories into our crops, photosynthesis—the biochemical pathway that plants use to turn carbon dioxide into sugar—is ultimately the rate-limiting step. According to a report authored by University of Illinois plant biologist Stephen Long and colleagues, there's never been a better time to try our hand at hacking the biochemical pathway that's fed the planet for over 3 billion years:

"We now know every step in the processes that drive photosynthesis in C3 crop plants such as soybeans and C4 plants such as maize," Long said in a statement. "We have unprecedented computational resources that allow us to model every stage of photosynthesis and determine where the bottlenecks are, and advances in genetic engineering will help us augment or circumvent those steps that impede efficiency."​

As Long outlines in his paper, there are a few basic approaches scientists might use to improve photosynthesis artificially. One strategy focuses on genetic engineering, or inserting useful genes from one organism into another. For instance, certain photosynthetic microbes use different pigments than our crops, allowing them to access unusual parts of the solar radiation spectrum. If we could insert pigment genes from these microbes into higher plants, we may be able to boost the amount of sunlight our crops can capture. Or, we could swap in genes that encode more efficient versions of critical enzymes, such as Rubisco. Another approach entirely would be to inject entire chloroplasts—the tiny, jellybean shaped factories where photosynthesis occurs—from a more-efficient sun machine into a less-efficient one.

Most of this research is still very preliminary, but scientists have seen some promising results so far. In the lab, Long's team has successfully inserted a handful of genes from blue-green algae into plants, boosting photosynthetic rates by up to 30 percent. Other research teams are using sophisticated computer models to study the entire photosynthetic pathway and pin down where the biochemical traffic jams occur. Such models have been able to achieve a 60 percent improvement in process efficiency, by up and down-regulating critical genes.

Of course, biohacking alone isn't going to save us from a global food crisis: Preparing for the effects of climate change and water shortages, and integrating more food production into the fabric of our cities, will also be critical steps. (As will reducing our production and consumption of meat, which is compounding most of our other environmental problems.) But it doesn't look like the idea of hacking photosynthesis is going away anytime soon, so you can add souped-up veggies, along with lab-grown burger patties and Soylent, to the list of bizarre techno-foods that may soon occupy a spot in your fridge.

http://www.cell.com/cell/fulltext/S0092-8674(15)00306-2

Idiots are already freaking about GMO's for no reason so I'm sure this will go over well :o
 
It's Official, Kitty Litter Caused a Drum of Nuclear Waste to Explode

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A drum full of radioactive waste exploded at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico last February, sparking serious safety concerns about the U.S.'s only longterm nuclear storage site. A yearlong government investigation has officially fingered the long-suspected culprit: kitty litter.

Kitty litter? Yes, inorganic kitty litter is commonly used to pack nuclear waste. But the contractor switched to wheat-based organic kitty litter, which reacted with existing chemicals in the waste. "The nitrate salt residues, organic sorbent (Swheat Scoop® ), and neutralization agent (triethanolamine) known to be present represent a potentially reactive chemical mixture of fuels and oxidizers," concludes the report's summary.

The technical investigation doesn't explain why the switch was made, but last year, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported it may have all started with a dumb typo.

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way...ty-litter?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=science

Wow, that's so stupid
 
A $50 Media Player Is Helping North Koreans Thwart Censorship

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A $50 media player is becoming a threat to North Korea's oppressive, isolationist regime. Many North Koreans are using cheap, portable Chinese media players to learn about the outside world and watch contraband foreign TV, news, and films.

North Koreans call these portable media players "notels" or "notetels," a portmanteau of "notebook" and "television." They have USB and SD ports and can tune for radio and TV, so people can watch shows loaded onto USB sticks they swap with each other. They're chargeable with car batteries, which is crucial in a country where electricity is unreliable. North Koreans have been buying notels since at least 2005, but last year, Pyongyang legalized the small devices, making them even more accessible.

Reuters' James Pearson talked to North Korean defector Lee Seok-young, who has smuggled over 18,000 notels from China to North Korea. Seok-young explained why the devices are so important for North Koreans who want to watch contraband without facing harsh consequences:

"To avoid getting caught, people load a North Korean DVD while watching South Korean dramas on a USB stick, which can be pulled out," he said. "They then tell the authorities, who feel the heat from the notel to check whether or not it has been recently used, that they were watching North Korean films".​

North Korea does have its own neutered Android tablets, but they don't have disc drives, USD/SD ports, or Wi-Fi, and they're $200. The media players, while not as up-to-date, are far more practical for surreptitious South Korean drama marathons.

In places like New York and Seoul, watching a candy-colored K-Pop video or a re-run of Friends is just a way to pass the time. But for the isolated people in North Korea, swapping and watching contraband media is both a grassroots act of political rebellion and a window to a world unmediated by Pyongyang's propaganda artists.

That's why activists like North Korean defector Kang Chol-hwan are smuggling USB drives with foreign media into North Korea, with the hopes that viewing something from the outside world will catalyze a change in thinking. And if enough people have notels and are receptive to the contraband messages, those $50 media players may end up as important tools for social change in the isolated nation.

http://in.reuters.com/article/2015/03/27/northkorea-change-insight-idINKBN0MM2W720150327

Anything that subverts that government is a good thing in my book
 
Russian Oligarch: Let's Build a Superhighway From Russia to the US

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Route 66. The Autobahn. The Trans-Eurasian Belt Development? The head of Russia's railway system has proposed a superhighway through Siberia across the Bering Strait that would link Europe with the United States through Russia.

According to a report from The Siberian Times, the highway would run alongside much of the current Trans-Siberia Railway, and end on the eastern edge of Russia with a tunnel or perhaps a bridge over the Bering Strait. It was proposed by the chief of Russia's railway system, Vladimir Yakunin, a "powerful oligarch" (with a bigoted agenda). The Siberian Times also reports that Yakunin unveiled his plan last week to the Russian Academy of Science, where he busted out some serious high-level pseudo-academic jargon:

He also said that Western-style globalisation is no longer seen as an incentive but as a hindrance on the economic, scientific, moral and spiritual development of society.

He said: 'This is an inter-state, inter-civilization, project. It should be an alternative to the current (neo-liberal) model, which has caused a systemic crisis. The project should be turned into a world 'future zone', and it must be based on leading, not catching, technologies.'​

This is far from the first time someone has imagined bridging Russian with Alaska. According to Paleofuture, in the 1890s the designer of the Golden Gate Bridge, Joseph Strauss, envisioned a bridge or tunnel across the Bering Strait, "within the lifetime of the present generation, to create a rail and highway route between points as distant as New York and Paris."

Yakunin's is probably destined to join Strauss's in the deep file of Bering Straight superhighways that were never built—fun though it is to imagine driving thousands of miles through some of the most inhospitable environments in the world.

http://www.cnn.com/2015/03/24/travel/trans-siberian-road/

I can get behind that idea, would be one hell of a road trip
 
Turning Styrofoam Into Aluminum is Surprisingly Easy

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If you're looking for a fun, high-risk weekend project, look no further: Grant Thompson, the self-styled "King of Random", has decided to shared his method for transforming styrofoam into metal. (Spoiler: don't try this one around your kids.)

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To start, you'll need to cut a model of your soon-t0-be metal creation out of foam. Thompson suggests using foam board from the dollar store, but foam housing insulation or craft blocks will work just as well. Once assembled, attach a thick foam riser to the top of your model, and bury it in a 5-gallon bucket filled with sand.

Next you'll have to fire up your homemade metal foundry (if you've never made one before, Thompson's got you covered). Now melt down some aluminum cans and pour the molten metal over your buried foam cast, taking care not to splash anything on yourself. The foam, Thompson explains, will vaporize instantly as liquid aluminum rushes in to take its place. Within a few minutes, your sculpture should be cool enough to remove. Do so carefully, using pliers. You can then polish up your new creation and place it prominently on display.

Most of us won't be able to afford a liquid 3D-printer anytime soon, but now, thanks to Thompson, we seem to have a pretty good low-tech alternative. Happy crafting, and please don't burn your face off.

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1zZE_kJ8rQHgLTVfobLi_g

Cool little trick, I can think of some fun stuff to do with this
 
You Can Now Hire a Handyman on Amazon

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Last year, Amazon started toying with the idea of not only selling you a TV, but also hooking you up with someone who could mount it. Now, Amazon's Home Services marketplace is up and running 41 major US cities so you can order plumbers and plungers from the same place.

Aside from just being dumb convenient, ordering services through Amazon means that you get to know the pricing upfront, can read Amazon reviews of the people you're hiring, and that Amazon will pop in and start throwing its weight around if for some reason you aren't happy with the service.

So far, the highest concentration of professionals are concentrated in Seattle, New York City, Los Angeles, and San Fransisco. And here in New York City at least, options range from "iPhone repair" to "goat grazing service." So far that's no option to hire someone to harass the super of my apartment building about a leaky bathroom ceiling, but I can only assume that'll be coming soon.

http://gizmodo.com/you-can-now-hire-a-handyman-on-amazon-1694497065

It's def a cool feature but I get this feeling like Amazon is quickly becoming the Walmart of the internet
 
NSA Considered Ending Phone Spying Before the Edward Snowden Leaks

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A new report by the Associated Press suggests that the National Security Agency mulled the possibility of abandoning its phone surveillance program just before the Edward Snowden's leaks—though ultimately the suggestion didn't progress fast enough.

The report explains that some officials at the NSA "believed the costs outweighed the meager counterterrorism benefits" that the program offered. Those internal critics pointed to ever-increasing costs of recording and storing information from phone calls which weren't successfully uncovering evidence of terrorism. Understandably, they also "worried about public outrage if the program ever was revealed," points out the AP.

Indeed, a proposal to scrap the system was apparently circualting within the NSA among "top managers" during 2013—though it had yet to make it to the desk of the NSA director General Keith Alexander by the time that Snowden leaked its documents.

After the event, of course, the NSA strongly defended its practices over telephone surveillance, arguing that it was vital for routing out terrorist threats. This new report suggests that internal thinking may have been rather more conflicted.

Meanwhile, the NSA continues to collect and store phone call data under Section 215 of the Patriot Act. Presumably, plenty of people at the NSA still think it's a bad idea.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/...tml?ir=Technology&ncid=tweetlnkushpmg00000046

Makes you wonder if Snowden hadn't leaked the info if they would have given up on it on their own?
 
LBJ Was Obsessed With His Johnson

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One imagines that the mind of the president is constantly occupied by the fate of the free world. This probably explains, for instance, why George W. Bush could barely read. Lyndon B. Johnson, though, was not your average president, for various reasons, but quite prominently that he was very concerned about the state of his penis.

Vanity Fair today points out an excerpt from a forthcoming history of the White House called The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House by Kate Anderson Brower. The section of the book about Johnson includes an anecdote about the presidential shower. According to Brower, it was very important that a newly installed jet stream be blasting water directly at Johnson's penis.

When told that it would be inconvenient to have a jet installed into the shower simply so that water could constantly shoot directly onto his penis, Johnson reportedly invoked the Vietnam War:

The 36th president of the United States reportedly refused to accept staff arguments that outfitting the shower with the demanded features—including one nozzle aimed "directly at the president's penis"—would require a great deal of plumbing work. "If I can move 10,000 troops in a day, you can certainly fix the bathroom any way I want it," Johnson told the staff, according to the book.​

On the one hand, Johnson wasn't technically moving 10,000 troops per day, physically speaking. He was basically just making a bunch of phone calls and playing with toy soldiers on a huge desk or whatever goes on during war. On the other hand, it would be unbecoming of the president to not have a clean dick. Sometimes you must put your country first.

Of course, this is far from the first we've heard about LBJ's dick. Years ago, audio surfaced of Johnson demanding that a tailor alter his pants so that they could accommodate his balls, which droop down near, in Johnson's words, his "bunghole."

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Johnson was also notorious for involving his penis in the daily lives of his colleagues, whether they liked it or not (and they might have, who's to say):

From an excerpt of Robert Caro's biography, via the New York Review of Books:

He early became fabled for a Rabelaisian earthiness, urinating in the parking lot of the House Office Building as the urge took him; if a colleague came into a Capitol bathroom as he was finishing at the urinal there, he would sometimes swing around still holding his member, which he liked to call "Jumbo," hooting once, "Have you ever seen anything as big as this?," and shaking it in almost a brandishing manner as he began discoursing about some pending legislation.​

R.I.P. to a great man and an even better dick.

http://www.vanityfair.com/news/2015/03/ldb-white-house-shower

That is pretty hilarious
 
Spokesman For Politician Who Committed Suicide Also Commits Suicide

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Just over a month ago, Tom Schweich, a Republican candidate for governor of Missouri, shot himself in his home outside St. Louis. This weekend, his spokesman and media director Spence Jackson did the same at his apartment in Jefferson City.

In a press conference this afternoon, police said that though Jackson's body was discovered yesterday after a family member was not able to get in touch with him, they believe he shot himself at some point early in the weekend. They also stated that a note was found in Jackson's apartment, but that they won't be releasing its contents.

Schweich committed suicide on February 26 in the midst of a frenzied morning in which he appeared to be setting up interviews with reporters in order to reveal what he believed to be a religion-based whisper campaign being waged against him by John Hancock, the chairman of the state's Republican party.

In the wake of Schweich's death, Jackson called for Hancock to resign his position:

"There is no way that the Missouri GOP can move forward under his leadership for the reasons that Sen. Danforth made out this morning," Jackson said. "He needs to resign and Catherine Hanaway needs to call on him to resign. It is unconscionable to think that the Missouri GOP can be successful in 2016 as John Hancock as the chairman."​

Jackson has repeatedly told the press that he will continue on as chairman of the party.

http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/...cle_81520750-f9cd-560c-8ecd-78163eeed778.html

Cue the conspiracy theorist
 
It's Very, Very Easy for Hackers to Steal Your IRS Account

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The only thing that sucks worse than doing taxes is a hacker stealing your identity, doing your taxes for you, and then depositing your return in a random bank account, where it can later be transferred to Nigeria. Sound impossible? It's not, according to the story of an unlucky man named Michael Kasper.

Long story short: You should register your IRS.gov account, because it's frightfully easy for hackers to do it for you. That's what happened to Kasper, who recently recounted his horror story to veteran security reporter Brian Krebs. An enterprising crook managed to register Kasper's IRS.gov account, request a transcript for his 2013 tax return, and then use that information to file a 2014 tax return successfully. The money from the return went to the bank account of a random student, who then sent the money via Western Union to Nigeria. She'd been hired off of Craigslist for a moneymaking opportunity and didn't realize she was doing something illegal. (Pro tip: Assume every "moneymaking opportunity" on Craigslist is illegal unless they can prove otherwise.)

The craziest thing about this saga is just how easy it apparently was to hack into the IRS system. It's not even hacking really, since the system is protected by so-called knowledge-based authentication (KBA). The fraudsters who broke into Kasper's account did so by guessing some basic information about his life—information that was readily available elsewhere on the web. A security researcher can do the same thing in a matter of minutes.

Click over to Krebs on Security to learn more about Kasper's sad story. However, since criminals won't be able to access your IRS transcript if you've already secured the account, you should probably go ahead and go to IRS.gov to lock things down. And just pray that the tax man ups his security game for next year.

http://krebsonsecurity.com/2015/03/sign-up-at-irs-gov-before-crooks-do-it-for-you/

How is it 2015 and the IRS is still operating like the internet is a new thing?
 
Custody Battle Over Massive Emerald Worth $370 Million Rages On

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It's 180,000 carats and weighs 840 pounds. Its value is estimated somewhere in the $370 million range, but really, the Bahia Emerald is so rare it's virtually priceless. No wonder the raw gem, which was found in 2001, is such a hot property — and has been at the center of a legal saga that's lasted years.

According to a decision handed down today in Los Angeles, the legal battle over the massive emerald with a strange history (it even survived Hurricane Katrina) will continue between the Americans fighting over it, despite recently-expressed interest from Brazil, the stone's country of origin.

Reports CBS News:

The emerald was first discovered in Brazil's Bahia mines in 2001. It was reportedly shipped from São Paulo to northern California, then bought, sold and allegedly stolen several times in several locations. Then in 2008, a man named Larry Biegler reported it stolen from his California warehouse. Police found the emerald in Las Vegas in the possession of Kit Morrison, who said he bought it from Biegler.

Morrison said he paid seven figures for the emerald and has proof.

"We have a purchase and sale agreement we have a lot of documentation," he said.

But the stone's story isn't that crystal clear.

"It belongs to Brazil and we are going to fight for it," Brazilian government representative Marconi Melo said.

The government claims in court documents that the emerald was "illegally mined, illegally transported, illegally exported to the United States."

When asked if they would even care if the emerald weren't worth so much money, Melo said, "We care that no gem or stone or mineral of Brazil could be taken out of the country without the correct authorization."​

The Bahia Emerald's ownership has been under debate since at least 2008, thanks to a tussle between the then-owner, the third-party company he'd hired to sell it, and the potential buyer. At the time, CNN reported that "someone used falsified papers to remove the stone from the secured vault in California" where it was stored, and spirited it to Las Vegas, where it was eventually discovered.

The company hired by the owner to sell it said in court papers it had received a $19 million offer, which the company wanted to accept.

It alleged the gemstone's owner then tried to go around the broker to sell the emerald to the same buyer for $75 million.​

(Best part of this chapter in the drama: "At one point, the emerald was listed for sale on eBay for a 'buy it now' price of $75 million." Unsurprisingly, nobody jumped on that.)

As the Sydney Morning Herald reports, the Brazilian government — which believes, Indiana Jones-style, that the emerald belongs in a museum — entered the debate last fall, though the judge in the case determined the ongoing case would proceed apace; another ownership claim was dismissed in January.

The Brazilian government last year asked a judge to dismiss the case outright or put it on hold while Brazilian officials continue negotiations with the US government to secure the stone's return ... Judge Michael Johnson made clear Monday that he was not ruling on the merits of Brazil's claim to ownership, but instead solely on the motion to dismiss or pause current court proceedings in Los Angeles.

Brazil's motion lacked sufficient evidence to warrant halting the case, Johnson said. There was no official declaration from Brazilian officials, nor was there any indication that diplomatic efforts would prove fruitful or timely.​

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/180000-karat-bahia-emerald-brazil-center-court-battle-los-angeles/

Fitting a green gem would be the object of so much greed
 
Do You Suffer From 'Exploding Head Syndrome'? You're Not Alone.

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New findings indicate nearly one in five college-age students has been startled awake by an abrupt, loud noise that doesn't actually exist. Known as "exploding head syndrome," the psychological condition appears to be more common and disruptive than previously thought.

Some of you may already be familiar with exploding head syndrome (EHS). I know I've experienced this on at least one or two occasions, and it's not pleasant. It's characterized by an exceptionally loud noise in the head (sometimes described as "an explosion" in the head), usually during sleep-to-wake or wake-to-sleep transitions. Though benign, it can be extremely stressful.

Here's what Washington State University psychologist Brian Sharpless, a sleep disorder expert and lead author of a recent study study on the prevalence of EHS among college undergraduates, told me about the condition:

Exploding head syndrome episodes by themselves are harmless. They can cause problems with a relatively small number of people if episodes happen too frequently, regularly disturb sleep, or if people react to them in unhealthy ways (e.g., by becoming really anxious before bedtime or fearing that something more serious may be wrong with them).​

Indeed, the effect only lasts for a brief moment, but EHS has been known to make some people think they're having a seizure or a brain hemorrhage — or that they're going crazy. Fearing stigma, some people refuse to tell their spouse or doctor (which may explain why it's rarely discussed in the scientific literature). Conspiracy theories are sometimes used to explain what's going on, such as the use of some sort of directed-energy weapon.

Not much is known about the causes of EHS or its prevalence. According to clinical lore, it only happens to people in their fifties and older. Previous studies have suggested it manifests mostly among women, or among those suffering from isolated sleep paralysis. Together with his team at Washington State University, Sharpless conducted a survey to learn more.

For his investigation, the results of which were published this month in the Journal of Sleep Research, Sharpless used a clinical diagnostic review to assess 211 undergraduate students for both EHS and isolated sleep paralysis. The sample size may seem a bit small and demographically constrained, but it is considered the largest EHS-related survey to date.

Results showed that 18% of the students experienced EHS at least once in their lives, and that it's a recurring condition for at least 16% of them. The researchers learned that the prevalence of EHS is roughly equal among the sexes, but that it's experienced by nearly 37% of those already diagnosed with isolated sleep paralysis (ISP is an unsettling condition where a person cannot perform voluntary muscle movements or speak while waking up). Sharpless says the connection between EHS and ISP may have something to do with a common underlying physical or psychological process, or the fact that college-age students suffer more from sleep disruptions and insomnia.

The study also showed that a small percentage of students experience EHS to such an extent that it's a significant problem in their life.

"Unfortunately for these individuals there is currently a paucity of treatment options and limited evidence for their efficacy beyond individual case studies," write the researchers in the study.

Because EHS happens when a person is falling asleep, scientists theorize that it's connected to problems with the brain's shut-down sequence. They liken it to a computer shutting down, with motor, auditory, and visual neurons switching off in separate phases. Using this analogy, the researchers hypothesize that the auditory neurons of someone with EHS fire all at once, instead of shutting down properly.

"That's why you get these crazy-loud noises that you can't explain, and they're not actual noises in your environment," noted Sharpless in a release. He added that the same part of the brain — the brainstem's reticular formation — appears to be involved in isolated sleep paralysis as well, which may explain why some people suffer from both conditions.

Sharpless hopes that clinicians will take the condition more seriously, in light of his team's results. As he told io9:

I think a more general awareness of exploding head syndrome by health professionals would be helpful, especially if they have patients reporting unusual sleep symptoms. Many people with this condition are reluctant to discuss these experiences even with doctors because they may feel embarrassed or might worry that the doctor might think they're "crazy" in some way. This study shows that exploding head syndrome is not uncommon, at least in college-aged people. Accurate prevalence rates for other ages are not yet known.​

The researchers urge for the development of effective treatment options, but add that, for some individuals, reassurance and education may be all that's needed.

In terms of next steps, Sharpless's lab is working to determine what things might make EHS more likely to occur.

"My lab is currently looking at psychological and behavioral factors as well as the relationships between exploding head syndrome and other more well-known disorders," he says. "This may lead to the discovery of new treatment options."

http://io9.com/do-you-suffer-from-exploding-head-syndrome-youre-not-a-1694503780

I've never even heard of this. Has anyone here on the Hype ever experienced this?
 
A Custody Battle Is Raging Over the Contents of This 1894 Time Capsule

http://www.post-gazette.com/local/c...shear-factory-Pittsburgh/stories/201503250207

Finders keepers? I know that's how it works with treasure in the ocean
It's not quite that simple, even in the ocean. There are all kinds of laws and abuses of the intention to the letter of the law making it quite murky to claim or maintain rights to property.

In otherwords: Whoever has the most money/better lawyers usually gets it whether they are actually the rightful owners or not.
 

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