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    It’s a little wonky, but here is the state of primary care in America. From the WSJ

    Dr. Hammond’s practice roughly broke even last year, with a profit of $29,261. The practice distributes its profit as bonuses to staff. Dr. Hammond says the practice operates on such a thin cash cushion that if a doctor or one of Westminster’s two physician assistants were gone for more than two months, it wouldn’t be able to make its payroll. Also, the clinic hasn’t been able to pay off around $86,000 in long-term debt, though it didn’t borrow to pay for its recent upgrades, including around $100,000 it spent to install the electronic medical records. “Any day, the bottom can drop out,” he says. “We could be bankrupt next month.”

    Last year, the clinic took in $2,115,101 in total revenue and barely inched into the black. In 2010, the practice lost money.

     
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    Camera Nikon D70
    ISO 200
    Aperture f/9.5
    Exposure 1/250th
    Focal Length 50mm

    The Fire Rainbow

    I’ve never been lucky enough to see one of these, have you? Make no mistake, though, they’re real. The technical term for the fire rainbow is a circumhorizontal arc

    High in the atmosphere, cirrus clouds form as wispy layers of ice that can stretch on for hundreds of miles. As light from the sun hits it, it refracts as if it was being shone through a prism.

    This refraction happens because when light goes from one medium to another, like from air to water or air to ice, it can be bent. Different wavelengths are bent to different extents, separating white light into its component colors.

    Want to know more? Check out this Khan Academy lesson on refraction.

    (via Kuriositas)

     
  3. 318

    Phineas Gage’s Connectome

    In 1848, railroad worker Phineas Gage had a 3.5-foot, 13 pound tamping iron blown through the front of his skull in a construction accident. Hell of a way to start your Wednesday (yes, I checked). He survived.

    The story of Phineas Gage is now the stuff of legend, taught to first-year neuroscience students around the world. How did this man survive a rod through the frontal lobe? Doctors that wrote of him later spoke of extreme behavioral changes, a man who was “. . . fitful, irreverent, indulging at times in the grossest profanity (which was not previously his custom), manifesting but little deference for his fellows”.

    Unfortunately, the legend of Phineas Gage’s post-injury brain is largely exaggerated, or at least based on rather thin evidence. But still, he was still a changed man, even if not in the extreme ways his legend suggests.

    UCLA’s Jack Van Horn has reconstructed a model of Phineas Gage’s connectome. In the image above, the lower left image shows the “connectogram” of 110 healthy right-handed males, the major highways and byways between brain regions (the brain stem is at 6 o’clock, left and right hemispheres at 9 and 3 o’clock). The lower right image shows the connections that were likely disrupted by the iron spike through Gage’s frontal lobe.

    Mo Costandi has a great write-up that you should check out. We now have a map of the damage to Gage’s brain. But do we really know any more about his supposed behavioral changes? Thanks to the exaggerations and sideshow mentality of those who studied hm while alive, likely not.

    BONUS: Be sure to check out Robert Krulwich and Carl Zimmer moderating this debate on how much stock we should put in the connectome.

    (via Neurophilosophy blog)

     
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    Losing My Mind: Sleep No More Spoilers Abound

    pepperminttwit:

    I am bursting at the seams to tell someone, everyone, what happened to me at Sleep No More tonight.

    So we got inside and my first objective was to get to the rave. I saw the Undertaker and didn’t feel like going down the stairs to the graveyard, so I just poked around upstairs in the candy shop…

     
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    headlikeanorange:

    Aurora australis in Antarctica. (Planet Earth - BBC)

     
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    Astronaut White floats in zero gravity.
    From Gemini IV.Inside Gemini IX, Lt. Col. T.P. Stafford
    Lt. Cdr. Gordon prepares for hatch open.Major Aldrin's helmet, open hatch.
    From Gemini IV.From Gemini IV.

    smithsonianmag:

    Never-Before-Seen Photos From the Early Days of Space Exploration

    The Gemini astronauts also took some of the most memorable photos in NASA history. You’d think we would have seen them all by now. But with Nasa’s help and funding, a team of researchers at Arizona State University led by lunar scientist Mark Robinson has retrieved from the archives dozens of outtakes that never made it into wide circulation.

    Photos: NASA

    Ed note: Check out our friends at Air & Space for more stunning photos from the Gemini mission.

    These are an absolute treasure. I don’t know if it was the tight quarters, lack of illumination, or the particular light characteristics of the Hasselblad 70mm cameras used on these missions, but they are equal parts spooky and beautiful. They capture the sort of terrifying, dramatic excitement that I imagine being one of the first men in orbit felt like. 

    A little extra tidbit about spacewalk photos from this era: Those gas canisters you see in their hands as they exit the spacecraft? Those are called “zip guns”, and they were used to maneuver while outside the capsule. Sort of like when Wall-e rides the fire extinguisher through space.

     
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    revelation2220:

    Pictured is the Super-Kamiokande, a giant neutrino detector, buried 1000m underground in Japan. Usually filled with 50,000 tonnes of pure water, the observatory detects neutrinos by watching for interactions with the subatomic particles in the water. These interactions are extremely rare, which is why the detector needed to be built to the scale it is.

     
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    ikenbot:

    Aurora over Hvitserkur in Iceland

    by Stephane Vetter

     
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    megsername:

    Reminiscing. #sleepnomore #mckittrick (Taken with instagram)

     
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    Boys played cricket near a tree in Kabul, Afghanistan, Wednesday, April 18, 2012.

    [Credit : Johannes Eisele/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images]