Don’t Fear the Bubble That Bursts – New York Times
So there is a good argument that society has a compelling interest in keeping house prices from getting too high. Reasonable prices allow young, middle-class families to buy a house without going into too much debt. They also let people live where they want.
Category: Lifestyle
Monster Waves Slide Show
101 Free Games: The Best Free Games on the Web
101 Free Games: The Best Free Games on the Web from 1UP.com
What you’re looking at is the result of countless hours spent searching for the best and newest free games
Music & amp; Sports
The secret’s out. It’s been revealed that the US snowboarding team’s success at the Turin Olympics is down to a performance enhancing device.
The Baltimore Sun has the scoop.
Probably no surprise that the device in question was an Apple iPod music player.
Nineteen-year-old Hannah Teter told reporters she was listen to a track from her boyfriend’s band when when she won gold last week in the women’s halfpipe.
The boyfriend in question is Eli Lieberman, the band is Strive Roots and the she was listening to was Communicate, which you can check out here.(There’s a hint of Bob Marley in the song.)
Researchers have only begun to investigate the effects of music on sports.
Before he went to medical school, Dr. Mark Tramo, director of Harvard’s Institute for Music and Brain Science, was a professional rock musician. He experienced an early demonstration of the music-sports connection during his prep-school track days. His gold medal victory in the 100-yard dash, he believes, was fueled by the Rolling Stones’ “Brown Sugar.” “It was playing over and over in my head,” he says.
Psychologist Petr Janata is preparing studies in his Center for Mind and Brain at the University of California, Davis, that may confirm what Dr. Tramo’s experience suggests. Mr. Janata explains: “Your body is performing these rhythmic actions and you’ve got the rhythmic structure in the music, and those two sets of rhythmic patterns are, in some way, combining or feeding off one another.”
Dr. Tramo sees the body feeding off the rhythm as if it were feeding off a drug. “You don’t need to go out and buy ecstasy. You don’t need to go out and buy cocaine. What you’re doing through the music, and through the context of being at a point when you can either win or lose the game, is setting up the brain to release chemicals….So your brain releases, for example, dopamine, and endorphins, which are kind of like opium in certain places, and adrenaline, and steroids in very specific places, some of them throughout the blood stream.” Just as with certain drugs, Dr. Tramo notes, “your heart starts pounding. You don’t want to just sit back in your seat and yawn. You want to stand. Your pupils get bigger. Your muscles get more active.”
All such symptoms are associated with our fight-and-flight reaction, the body’s primitive, automatic response when the brain alerts us to defend ourselves or flee from attack. Perhaps the effect of hip-hop music on sports most resembles that of military marches intended to prepare an army for battle. As Dr. Tramo observes, “an athletic contest…is kind of like a controlled war.”
Snowboarder Mike Yearin estimates that eight out of 10 of his fellow snowboarders listen to music as they ride — even as they compete. The picture is of the IPod ready snowboard jacket.
Test Your Happiness
Maria posted this site with a series of Tests in her Comment on the “Happiness isn’t Normal” article earlier in this blog with this:
Check out Dr. Seligman, Director of Univ. of Pennsylvania Department of Positive Psychology. Many tests are on the website to measure your “happiness scale”. His outlook seems to be to work on your strengths rather than concentrate on the typical ” I am a mess because …
Why Doctors So Often Get It Wrong
Why Doctors So Often Get It Wrong – New York Times
Under the current medical system, doctors, nurses, lab technicians and hospital executives are not actually paid to come up with the right diagnosis. They are paid to perform tests and to do surgery and to dispense drugs.
There is no bonus for curing someone and no penalty for failing, except when the mistakes rise to the level of malpractice
After $12,000, There’s Even Room to Park the Car – New York Times
After $12,000, There’s Even Room to Park the Car – New York Times
People pay for garage feng shui
Happiness Isn’t Normal
TIME Magazine Archive Article — Happiness Isn’t Normal — Feb. 13, 2006
A new school of psychology shakes up the field.
Mike Parsons of San Clemente, Calif., successfully negotiates a 60-foot wave at Cortes Bank, located 100 miles off the California coast, in January 2001. Click to enlarge.