Anthropology 100

The Human Genome Project

Notes

Indian Reservation profits from Oil

Created by Adjunct Professor Feb 24, 2010 at 4:24pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Feb 24, 2010.

Cultures make their own beliefs and mores.

Created by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010 at 6:07pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010.

Disrespect is Everywhere..

Created by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010 at 5:51pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010.

How do we become prejudiced?

Created by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010 at 5:41pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010.

Son of King of Gypsies dies 2009 in Prague

Created by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010 at 5:24pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010.

Slavery has been everywhere

Created by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010 at 5:21pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Jan 24, 2010.

Black Ceramics of Romania

Created by Adjunct Professor Oct 23, 2009 at 7:19pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Oct 23, 2009.

Preserving Culture using digital media

Created by Prof.Rosell Fernandez Sep 26, 2009 at 2:58pm. Last updated by Adjunct Professor Oct 26, 2009.

A Cuban Explains "Santeria."

Created by Prof.Rosell Fernandez Aug 28, 2009 at 11:59am. Last updated by Prof.Rosell Fernandez Aug 28, 2009.

Persecution of the Roma-2009

Created by Prof.Rosell Fernandez Aug 27, 2009 at 4:53pm. Last updated by Prof.Rosell Fernandez Aug 27, 2009.

This study on intelligence is flawed


Scientists Unravel Mysteries of Intelligence
By Amanda Gardner
HealthDay Reporter by Amanda Gardner
healthday Reporter – 1 hr 25 mins ago

FRIDAY, Feb. 26 (HealthDay News) -- It's not a particular brain region that makes someone smart or not smart.

Nor is it the strength and speed of the connections throughout the brain or such features as total brain volume.

Instead, new research shows, it's the connections between very specific areas of the brain that determine intelligence and often, by extension, how well someone does in life.

"General intelligence actually relies on a specific network inside the brain, and this is the connections between the gray matter, or cell bodies, and the white matter, or connecting fibers between neurons," said Jan Glascher, lead author of a paper appearing in this week's issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. "General intelligence relies on the connection between the frontal and the parietal [situated behind the frontal] parts of the brain."

The results weren't entirely unexpected, said Keith Young, vice chairman of research in psychiatry and behavioral science at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine in Temple, but "it is confirmation of the idea that good communication between various parts of brain are very important for this generalized intelligence."

General intelligence is an abstract notion developed in 1904 that has always been somewhat controversial.

"People noticed a long time ago that, in general, people who are good test-takers did well in a lot of different subjects," explained Young. "If you're good in mathematics, you're also usually good in English. Researchers came up with this idea that this represented a kind of overall intelligence."

"General intelligence is this notion that smart people tend to be smart across all different kinds of domains," added Glascher, who is a postdoctoral fellow in the department of humanities and social sciences at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

Hoping to learn more, the authors located 241 patients who had some sort of brain lesion. They then diagrammed the location of their lesions and had them take IQ tests.

"We took patients who had damaged parts of their brain, tested them on intelligence to see where they were good and where they were bad, then we correlated those scores across all the patients with the location of the brain lesions," Glascher explained. "That way, you can highlight the areas that are associated with reduced performance on these tests which, by the reverse inference, means these areas are really important for general intelligence."

"These studies infer results based on the absence of brain tissue," added Paul Sanberg, distinguished professor of neurosurgery and director of the University of South Florida Center for Aging and Brain Repair in Tampa. "It allows them to systemize and pinpoint areas important to intelligence."

Young said the findings echo what's come before. "The map they came up with was what we expected and involves areas of the cortex we thought would be involved -- the parietal and frontal cortex. They're important for language and mathematics," he said.

In an earlier study, the same team of investigators found that this brain network was also important for working memory, "the ability to hold a certain number of items [in your mind]," Glascher said. "In the past, people have associated general intelligence very strongly with enhanced working memory capacity so there's a close theoretical connection with that."

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Race? it's a social construct. it has no biological basis.It is a politically empowering term to set up a hierarchy ,in all societies.

Triskelle - Spending Time In Ireland
Magazines Around the World:
http://www.egypttoday.com"

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The real history of Cuba beginning with the massacre of the Indians of Oriente Province and file:///C:/DOCUME~1/ADMINI~1/LOCALS~1/Temp/SSRN-id1369422.pdf

This is a Cuban study,not American.]

Story of Henrietta Lacks-and the HELA cells
Just found out today. Read the original story posted by Janet Singleton. Just wonderful. As a cultural anthropologist,I would have to agree that the political climate allowed this to happen,there is a thin line between the "racial" implications and the general government use of their 'subjects' for unauthorized experimentation.

We do not ascribe to the common thought of race as a separate distinct and discreet genetic corpus. We do not share with the world that we currently only recognize one race. Human. You may read The American Anthropological Association's Statement on Race.Please.

We are aware of the social constructs for political purposes. There are errors in thought and perception on some of the responses but that is to be expected.

The writer, if she continued her studies in genetics would have discovered that the issue of "race" impacts only insofar as the perception. While it is not "real" it is a reality.

From a humanistic perspective her cells have helped many. Please keep in mind that no society,group or clan has ever been exempt at one time or another from man's cruelty to man.

I taught at The Borough of Manhattan Community College,2001-2003.

The narrowest house in New York City is up for sale for $2.7 million. The 9 1/2 foot wide, 42 foot long abode in Greenwich Village, has previously been the home of poet Edna St. Vincent Millay and anthropologist Margaret Mead. If you had unlimited funds at your disposal, would you purchase this "vertical suite"? Fifty-eight percent of respondents said no, 29 percent said yes and 13 percent said maybe.

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