Friday, July 18, 2008

Italy


One of my goals is to visit Italy after I graduate from college. The country is filled with cultural and historical treasures just waiting to enlighten the knowledge and curosity.

The idea of walking through the ancient ruins of the Roman Forum, the Coliseum or the city of Pompeii, then marvel at the masterpieces of Michelangelo, Rafael and DaVinci will culturally highlight the experience!

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Trevi Fountain, Rome, Italy

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Calabria,Italy

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The Roman Forum in Rome, Italy

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Roman ruins

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The Vatican

Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Brain: Our Sense of Self


“I think, therefore I am.” —RenĂ© Descartes, 17th-century philosopher

Few of us question the crucial importance of the brain. It is vital to our existence. Our brains enable us to think, as René Descartes so skillfully pointed out nearly 400 years ago. Yet the human brain is responsible for so much more. It directs almost everything we do. It controls our voluntary movements, and it regulates involuntary activities such as breathing and heartbeat. The brain serves as the seat of human consciousness: it stores our memories, allows us to feel emotions, and gives us our personalities.

The brain makes up only 2 percent of our body weight, but it consumes 20 percent of the oxygen we breathe and 20 percent of the energy we consume. This enormous consumption of oxygen and energy fuels many thousands of chemical reactions in the
brain every second. These chemical reactions underlie the actions and behaviors we use to respond to our environment. In short, the brain dictates the behaviors that allow us to survive.

Scientists have worked for many years to unravel the complex workings of the brain. Their research efforts have greatly improved our understanding of brain function. During the past decade alone, scientific and technical progress in all fields of brain research has been astonishing. Using new imaging techniques, scientists can visualize the human brain in action. Images produced by these techniques have defined brain regions responsible for attention, memory, and emotion. A series of discoveries (in multiple fields of study) has displaced the long-standing assumption that brain cells are stable and unchanging. Amazingly, new findings show that some adult brain cells can divide and grow! In addition, advances in research are allowing scientists to analyze and make progress toward understanding the causes of inherited brain disorders such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease. Taken together, these discoveries provide hope for the recovery of nervous system function lost through injury or disease.

Despite these and other significant advances in the field of brain research, most of the processes responsible for the integrated functioning of billions of brain cells remain a mystery. Research on the brain in the new millennium is crucial to our effort to come to a complete understanding of this fascinating organ. In turn, improved understanding makes the development of new treatment options possible. Research continues to bring new insights into how the brain is put together, how it works, and whether damage to the brain can be reversed.

An essential aspect of any scientific research is communicating results to the public in a way that is easily understood. The American public has the opportunity to learn of new research findings about the brain regularly through media reports of scientific breakthroughs and discoveries. However, not all the information we receive is accurate. Commercial products promoted through television advertisements claim to improve memory, enhance concentration, or relieve depression, among other things. The media may oversimplify research findings into a “sound clip” open to misinterpretation. In addition, movies, television shows, and the World Wide Web often contain inaccuracies in their portrayal of research findings about brain structure or function.

To correctly interpret the information transmitted through these venues, we need a better understanding of basic concepts related to the brain. By providing students with a conceptual framework about the brain, we significantly increase our chances of producing an informed public that has the tools to interpret brain research findings. Accordingly, it is the goal of this supplement to provide teachers and students with correct information regarding the brain, its role in the nervous system, and how it provides us with our sense of self.

Pictures are words

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MOMO comes to New York from the foggy San Francisco Bay, by way of 12 mostly adventurous years in southern climes; Jamaica, Spain, New Orleans, Key West, Taos, Georgia and North Carolina, living in tents, caves, cars, and sheds. There was a geodesic dome home, and railroad chalet, and some times with an older seductress in Arizona, the place in the Vieux Carrie had no locks on the doors and "The Believery" warehouse had no doors. MOMO has been outside most of his life. He's also been completely obsessed with art making. Which is how it makes sense he arrived at street art.

After years of admiring graffiti, he finally tried painting freight trains in 1998 along high mountain passes in Montana. Prior to that he stayed inside a sketchbook. The next 3 years aren't so inventive - just translating sketchbook to aerosol, or gluing enlarged drawings to walls, though in 1999 he was sneaking photographs of locals and illustrating giant posters with their likeness' to celebrate them unilaterally. In 2002 the interest in Naturalism finished with cheery, life-size children cutout posters, addressing the national gloom that followed 9-11. But from there, Naturalism went with the need to pander to general audiences, as MOMO fell out of step with his country on its march to war. Now his art could be anything.

Judith Supine is my idol

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Judith Supine is a 29-year-old artist living in Brooklyn, NY. Supine could not speak until a month after his seventeenth birthday. He could not physically articulate words, he could only squeak and grunt. Supine often drew pictures to communicate with his family. His mom saved all of his pictures, just one of many reasons why his mom is great.

Judith Supine uses materials that are free or at least real cheap. He uses an exacto-knife, glue sticks, cheap ugly paints and real sleazy magazines that make him sexually uncomfortable. Judith Supine gets his magazines out of people's trash, from the public library, from the dentist's offices, from his little sister's magazine collection, from bankrupt porn shops.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Artful Blogging

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Justin Nozuka

Wallpaper

Decorating is a creative outlet for me. It has become a passion that I throughly enjoy!

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Lloyd Wallpaper


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Josette Wallpaper


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Oriental Garden Wallpaper


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Toile Wallpaper

Vintage Design

Decorating Your Bedroom With a Vintage Design

Looking for a different bedroom decorating idea that will add unique charm to your room? Here are some ideas on using vintage linens for a unique and nostalgic bedroom appeal.

There's nothing that adds a more unique appeal to any decorating theme then using vintage items and one great bedroom decorating idea- to decorate your bedroom using vintage linens. These pieces from days gone bye have a charm that you really don't find in soft goods today and are easy to find and fairly affordable.

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This girl's bedroom, fit for a little princess, features fairytale furnishings and pinch-pleated curtains made out of pretty pink and white fabric from Chiltern Mills. A miniature crystal chandelier completes this fantasy theme.


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Vintage bedroom
For a fresh vintage look in your bedroom, mix white-painted furniture, like this chest of drawers from Laura Ashley and vintage-style floral patterned accessories. The clean white walls are a perfect contrast with the curtain fabric from Luna.


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Feminine boudoir
Bring together one eye-catching floral wall, white-painted exposed brickwork walls, wooden floorboards and doors and keep the subtly going with white vintage furniture pieces. Sharpen the girliness with grown-up glamour pieces such as this striking vintage mirror and dress-maker's mannequin. Keep an eye out for other vintage finds to make your space an ever-evolving treasure trove.


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Dainty bedroom
The classic design of chinoiserie has a trailing flower pattern, and has been used to great effect on this Laura Ashley wallpaper. The design is also very effective on the mirror design. Team it with fresh linen and pretty pastel coloured furniture.


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Vintage needlework bedroom
Antique styles of needlework in ivory, leaf and rose with subtle French knots and pintucks for texture create a pretty room. Pink walls, a patterned floral rug from The Rug Company, Leporello canopied bed and French-style furniture add romance. A Mark Maynard armoire provides elegant storage, a chandelier and gilded mirror are glamorous touches.


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On one wall of the master bedroom, a painted antique dresser pairs with petite French chair.


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Furniture that girls of any age can appreciate: a large over-stuffed chair and ottoman for lounging and a vanity table for primping and prepping.


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Both the shower curtain and gathered skirt utilize traditional toile, but in a bold choice of color. A flat sheet, sized for a single bed, makes a great shower curtain.